on 2011-12-05 11:27 John Francis wrote
I'd bet these zoespokes only work on video (or, presumably, film).
They are probably also extremely sensitive to the speed at which
the wheel was turning; a key feature of a real zoetrope is that
the viewing shutter is synchronised with the image frame rate.
On Mon, Dec 05, 2011 at 07:09:22AM +0100, mike wilson wrote:
> On 02/12/2011 18:27, Bob W wrote:
> >Much better than pink shiny tassles:
> >< http://www.photoweeklyonline.com/awesome-bicycle-animation/>
>
> I wonder if they actually work as you view them in real life. Even
> zoetropes had a rudi
On 02/12/2011 18:27, Bob W wrote:
Much better than pink shiny tassles:
< http://www.photoweeklyonline.com/awesome-bicycle-animation/>
I wonder if they actually work as you view them in real life. Even
zoetropes had a rudimentary shutter. There's only one way to find out,
I suppose
--
> From: "Bob W"
> Much better than pink shiny tassles:
> < http://www.photoweeklyonline.com/awesome-bicycle-animation/ >
>
> B
>
That's pretty neat! More after my seizure subsides...
Tom C.
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Those were pretty cool optical illusions.
On 12/2/2011 12:27 PM, Bob W wrote:
Much better than pink shiny tassles:
< http://www.photoweeklyonline.com/awesome-bicycle-animation/>
B
--
Don't lose heart! They might want to cut it out, and they'll want to avoid a
lengthily search.
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Much better than pink shiny tassles:
< http://www.photoweeklyonline.com/awesome-bicycle-animation/ >
B
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