Oh, yes, indeed.
It doesn’t get much better than this.
Check out this awesome collection of 8-bit movie posters:
The #1 Resource for Church Technology Creativity & New Thinking
by Eric Dye
Oh, yes, indeed.
It doesn’t get much better than this.
Check out this awesome collection of 8-bit movie posters:
by Eric Dye
In keeping with his Visual Theology series, Tim Challies has added three more beauties to an already stellar set of theology centered infographics.
I love these!
Not only are they really well done, but the info is great.
Deep theology has never been this easy to digest.
Check’em out:
by Eric Dye
by Eric Dye
With all of the creative digital photography apps available for smartphones, it’s cool to see artists using traditional photographs and organic design to manipulate the photos to create something a little different, but mostly inspiring.
Raleigh-based artist and landscape architect Scott Hazard uses carefully layered photographs to create delicately torn concentric shapes symbolizing plumes of smoke, clouds, and mysterious portals in walls. Hazard has also used adaptations of the same technique to create a number of fantastic typographic works he calls Text Constructs.
Take a look at these:
by Eric Dye
What if Wolverine and Cyclops switched power?
Well …
… take a look:
[Read more…] about Oops! Wolverine & Cyclops Switched Powers
by Eric Dye
It’s called the ‘RedBall Project’ and it has less to do about the ball and everything about the experience:
On the surface, the experience seems to be about the ball itself as an object, but the true power of the project is what it can create for those who experience it. It opens a doorway to imagine what if? As RedBall travels around the world people approach me on the street with excited suggestions about where to put it in their city. In that moment the person is not a spectator but a participant in the act of imagination. I have witnessed it across continents, diverse age spans, cultures, and languages, always issuing an invitation. That invitation to engage, to collectively imagine, is the true essence of the RedBall Project. The larger arc of the project is how each city responds to that invitation and, over time, what the developing story reveals about our individual and cultural imagination.
Here’s a video from the RedBall’s visit to Taipei: