LomoKino 1 year ago
Wow! Shoot analogue movies on regular 35mm film. A 36-exposure roll gets you 144 frames of lo-fi, wide-screen awesomeness. Check out the LomoKino or watch more mini-movies.
Wow! Shoot analogue movies on regular 35mm film. A 36-exposure roll gets you 144 frames of lo-fi, wide-screen awesomeness. Check out the LomoKino or watch more mini-movies.
I love how this shows the fluid nature of La Presse across papier, web, and applications mobiles.
(via Brand New)

A few weeks ago Jane and I hosted a night of watching online videos on the big screen. Everyone submitted their favorite artsy/inspirational/funny/ridiculous videos and we watched them all! Here are some of the highlights:
Steve introduced us to live music programming with A Study in Part, shared music-making with glass bottles, and showed us 1 musician on 2 pianos.
Natalia’s one pick was 16 minutes long but totally worth it. Three songs, one music video: Russ Chimes – Midnight Club EP.
Jane shared deleted scenes from Pulp Fiction, a ridiculous John Berger documentary, and a special selection from the Tim and Eric Awesome Show Great Job!.
Saul showed us a fantastic Sarah Brightman music video and taught us about Water (chemical symbol H20) and The Brain through the BBC’s Look Around You series.
Oh, there was an Indian Superman sighting.
Signs was randomly submitted and much appreciated.
I showed off my current favorite video (about The Sartorialist) and CL!CK, which makes me smile every time (and also Spheres Of Fury and Dark Side of the Lens).
At first FEZ just looks like a normal side scroller. But then you realize that there’s a bit more to it than that…
Great profile of two artists, and the mural at the end is fantastic.

This is truly fantastic. When I first read the instructions — “play these together, some or all, start them at any time, in any order” — I thought, “There’s no way this will sound good.”
But it does; it’s better than good. Go play.
A video that Jane and I made for the Interaction ’11 student competition. The theme is “Use not own,” and our idea is a system that helps people who live in apartments share things with their neighbors.
Check out this video from the GE show. A little like time-lapse photography, but with video cameras. The typography and the way it transitions in is really nice, too.
Found on datavisualization.ch, a new favorite of mine.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3V5S7NhvcA
I love the “break the mold” reference. Also see the accompanying website (I was surprised to learn who made all this).