Lost Motion Assembly | Blog

Design, development and occasional bloggery

Interactive Window Projections By Britzpeterman

Feb

This is simply amazing; to jazz up their shop windows, German design studio Britpetermann created a series of interactive installations that respond to passer-bys. Constructed out of a Kinect, a projector an Arduino servo and lot’s of magical custom rendering and frameworks, the end result is equal parts impressive and playful.

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By: Dre

Delightful Marbled Prints by Jemma Lewis

Feb

I’ve always been much enamoured with marbled patterns; they are firmly fixed in my mind as end papers for family encyclopedias, circa 1982. My first – and only attempt – at marbling was crafting my own end papers for a book binding project in school when I was 10. Evidently it was an interest in theory if not practise. Read the rest of this entry »

By: Dre

Mappix

Dec

A Google Maps satellite photo of NU Canada

We stumbled upon Mappix whilst perusing the mightily impressive portfolio of designer and developer Philipp Oehrlein. The premise is as simple as “one random google maps image a day. That’s it.” As modest as this sounds, it is a surprisingly engaging affair; removing the familiar controls turns the google maps experience into a kind of geographical roulette.

Without the familiar demarcations of borders, roads or any other labels it distils the images to pure topography, stripping away contextualising clues.
This particular shot eschews any indication of scale – it could as well be a slide of some grains of sand. Such images conjure up Baudrillardian ruminations on the nature of maps vs. territories, whilst reinstating the joy of simply looking at the sheer diversity of the earth on a purely visual scale.

By: Dre

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The Week That Was #48

Dec

It’s not all work with us. In-between projects this week we have mostly been…

… avoiding the cold by curling up on the sofa and watching films all ‘based on true stories’…

… starting with the darkly gripping (but factually questionable) The Last King of Scotland

… then moving onto the equally sordid City of God

… before finally taking a respite from all the gritty solemness with The King’s Speech

By: Dre

New Work From Johnny Wan

Nov

New Work from Jonny Wan

LMA favourite Jonny Wan has recently updated his website and added some new work, including this illustration for Russian magazine Sekret Firmy. I’m not entirely sure what Sekret Firmy is about (it is in Russian after all) but a sneaky peek at their flickr page reveals that they do like themselves some purdy illustrations and tasty layouts.

Via Supersonic Electronic

By: Dre

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Guido Perrini: Timelapse Footage

Nov

In between capturing footage of big mountain legend Xavier de la Rue demonstrating the suave levels of bad-assery that we mere mortals shall never possess, freeride filmmaker Guido Perrini managed to turn his lens away long enough to capture some beautiful timelapse footage of the mountains. This bonus footage comes as part of The Timeline Missions; a series of short films following Xavier around the world as he looks for more ways to make the rest of us feel very, very small.

Be sure to check out Guido Perrini’s documentary Ten. At times sombre, it looks behind the scenes at freeride film making, and reveals it to be a world that is part-expedition, part-photoshoot, and filled with equal parts thrills and dangers.

By: Dre

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Universal Everything: Deutsche Bank Video Wall

Nov

Deutsche Bank / Media Wall / In-Situ from FIELD on Vimeo.

The more astute readers may have noticed that we’re on something of a video art binge at the moment, and it shows no sign of ending anytime soon.

For its brand new building in Hong Kong, Deutsche Bank wanted a dramatic artwork to fit their shiny new foyer. They turned to digital auteur, Matt Pyke of Universal Everything. Working with London based digital art studio FIELD, they created a stunning 12 metre long video wall to display eight dynamic motion artworks by several artists. Amazingly, each video is generated in realtime, so that each viewing remains subtly unique. In order to achieve this technical feat, the wall required a bespoke system of eight networked computers in order to output the generated video works. You can see more of the wall, as well as a short documentary on it’s creation over at FIELD’s Vimeo page.

FIELD also recently produced the video for the single Ariel, by Stateless, out now on Ninja Tune. They will be holding a screening at the Animateka Animation Festival in Slovenia on the 9th of December.

Via Visuelle

By: Dre

Be Linen

Nov

Be Linen 2 is a short film directed by Benoit Millot of Le Potager Design, commissioned by the Linen and Hemp Community. It highlights the advantages of flax fibre as an ecologically sound alternatives to other composite materials. The subtitles are a little hard to read at times, but it’s engaging and beautifully shot, so well worth a watch.

Via The Strange Attractor

By: Dre

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Uno Moralez

Nov

The weird works of Uno Moralez

I’m not sure what is going on in the macabre work of Umo Moralez. Needless to say it reminds of some demented, pixelated ero guro, like graphics from an Amiga-era video game adaptation of one of Hideshi Hino’s works. Probably not safe for viewing at work, depending on where you work.

Via Colt + Rane

By: Dre

Rip Curl & Time-Slice

Nov

 

For those that don’t know, GoPro specialise in rugged, nigh indestructible video cameras that you can mount to nearly anything, allowing anyone brave enough to make videos that make us very, very jealous.

Rip Curl and TimeSlice (the surf brand and camera array experts respectively, not two 2nd generation Decepticons) have teamed up to produce Mirage, a short but hypnotic surf film. Using a rig of 30 GoPro HD cameras, the team were able to capture shots of surfers frozen in action from multiple angles. It’s The Matrix meets Point Break, with nary a Keanu in sight. It’s all a tad extravagant for promoting a line of shorts, but it is impressive to watch nonetheless.

If you prefer your action on land (and on four wheels), be sure to check out TimeSlice Films’ previous team-up with DC Shoes – the frankly mind-boggling Gymkhana FOUR: The Hollywood Megamercial.

Via Core77

By: Dre

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