FeedIndex
Filter: slide  view all
Color photograph depicting reflective surface view of indoor classroom or workshop environment. Central figure stands in front of mirror, holding smartphone in right hand to capture self-portrait. Subject wears black long-sleeved shirt, black apron tied at waist, gray pants, white athletic shoes with black stripes, and disposable hairnet. Reflection reveals full stance with neutral expression, positioned slightly to left of center.

Background consists of multi-participant environment. Other individuals also wear aprons and hairnets, indicating collective involvement in food-preparation or practical training activity. Two participants are seated at table, engaged with materials. One participant stands near left side, adjusting apron. Far-right participant faces away, preparing items on table surface. Rectangular table extends across room, covered with white sheet and scattered objects including containers, utensils, and ingredients.

Wall at rear displays projected slide with colorful circular diagram and text partially visible, suggesting instructional component of session. Ceiling shows fluorescent light fixtures and mounted projector aligned with screen. Floor composed of polished light wood panels, chairs with black upholstery arranged around tables. Coat draped over chair in foreground provides additional context of casual classroom arrangement.

Photographic framing emphasizes workshop documentation through mirror reflection, situating central subject as both participant and recorder. Context indicates structured activity combining instructional presentation with hands-on engagement.
Digital interface screenshot displays raster graphics software workspace, specifically Adobe Photoshop brush configuration panel positioned within upper left quadrant of the screen. The active environment indicates the brush tool settings dialog where adjustable parameters are presented, including circular preview icon, pixel-based size value, and hardness slider. Size is configured at eighty pixels as indicated numerically and graphically, with hardness control set to zero percent, producing a soft-edged application profile. Below the primary configuration area, a horizontal strip of thumbnail previews illustrates brush tip options with dimensions labeled in pixel increments, ranging from smaller units to larger coverage values. Cursor hover reveals tooltip identifying "Kyle’s Dry Media – Scraper (modified) (Smudge Tool)" as currently highlighted selection, signifying user customization of an existing preset to function within smudge blending operations.

Expanded library beneath the strip includes categorized section labeled "Dry Media Brushes," containing multiple preset entries such as "KYLE Ultimate Pencil Hard," "KYLE Ultimate Charcoal Pencil 25px Med2," and additional specialized graphite, chalk, and charcoal simulations. Each entry displays visual preview stroke indicating texture, edge dynamics, and opacity flow characteristics, allowing comparative assessment of surface behavior. The inclusion of "Kyle" identifiers denotes brushes originating from the Kyle T. Webster brush collection integrated into Adobe Creative Cloud library system, specifically emulating analog drawing instruments through digital vectorized rasterization algorithms.

Interface layout further displays contextual menus with top bar navigation including File, Edit, Image, Layer, Type, Select, Filter, and 3D categories, along with subordinate options for Mode set to Normal blending and additional adjustable opacity and flow fields not visible in the cropped frame. Yellow bounding line around screen edge suggests presence of Wacom Cintiq or equivalent external pen display device, where software window is maximized against hardware border. Reflected glare appears on protective surface overlay, producing specular highlight distortion consistent with photographic capture of emissive display under environmental lighting.

Overall, the image represents digital painting workflow environment in which artist selects from a curated set of smudge and dry media brushes to achieve textural realism, tonal modulation, and analog-style rendering in a digital workspace. Structural details visible in the panel reveal both interface hierarchy and parameter granularity, illustrating contemporary hybridization of traditional drawing technique emulation with computational control systems.
Photograph captures panel session held in conference environment with five speakers seated in front of projection screen. Session is part of MAPP PRO program dated 28 September, scheduled from 10:30 to 12:00 at Mila (Quebec Artificial Intelligence Institute).

Projection screen behind panel displays event details. Title indicates focus on augmented creation, examining how artificial intelligence transforms artistic practices and reshapes perception of digital culture: “Création augmentée: comment l’IA transforme l’expression artistique et la perception culturelle numérique.” Speaker images and names are arranged on right side of slide, while event branding and partner logos are visible at edges.

Panel composition includes five individuals seated in single row with handheld microphones. Participants wear casual to semi-formal attire. Rightmost speaker, dressed in dark jacket and glasses, is actively speaking while holding microphone. Central figures are seated with neutral postures, one clasping notes or device. Leftmost participant wears patterned shirt, contrasting with darker clothing of others.

Foreground includes Mila logo in large semi-transparent purple lettering projected digitally onto photograph’s corner, linking event to host institution. Surrounding environment includes exposed ceiling infrastructure, suspended lighting fixtures, and minimalist industrial-style interior common to academic or research venues.

Overall, the photograph documents public discourse on intersection of artificial intelligence and artistic expression within institutional framework, highlighting collaborative exploration of cultural and technological integration.
The image depicts a male figure in formal attire with the head partially intact but the face replaced by a circular mechanical device resembling a film reel or rotary projection apparatus. The reel structure extends outward from the cranial cavity, occupying the entire facial region. Around the circumference are numerous rectangular frames, each resembling individual film stills or slides arranged in sequential order. The radial design emphasizes rotational movement, converging toward a central hub with spokes resembling turbine blades.

Attached to the apparatus is an angular measuring arm, like a stylus or pointer, positioned as though to indicate specific frames within the reel. A smaller mechanical component, resembling a camera lens or projector head, protrudes from the lower portion, with viscous black fluid dripping from its edge. The head retains realistic painted textures of skin, hair, and neck, contrasting with the hyper-detailed mechanical intrusion replacing the facial features. Background treatment is subdued, consisting of a neutral textured field that enhances the focus on the surreal fusion of human and machine.

The composition blends portraiture with mechanical symbolism, evoking themes of identity, media technology, and the replacement of organic individuality with cinematic apparatus. The reel motif, combined with the anatomical substitution of the face, positions the subject as both viewer and machine, collapsing distinctions between operator, medium, and recorded image.
Digital screenshot depicting a professional non-linear video editing software environment, showing export settings panel superimposed over main editing workspace. Central dialog box labeled “Export Settings” includes multiple fields specifying format, preset, output name, and encoding configurations. Selected format displayed as H.264, with output path assigned to user-defined directory. Preset options indicate standard video encoding profiles. Beneath format and output fields, subsections include summary of output file parameters such as resolution, frame rate, aspect ratio, and target bit rate. Configurable sliders and numeric entry boxes allow user-defined customization of bitrate encoding, keyframe distance, and audio export options. Buttons at lower right provide “Export” and “Queue” functions, enabling direct rendering or deferred processing.

Background workspace partially visible behind export panel. Timeline panel displayed at lower portion of screen, containing layered audiovisual tracks. Video track represented by thumbnail strips and colored blocks; audio track represented as waveforms with amplitude peaks and valleys. Track indicators include labels such as V1, V2 for video and A1, A2 for audio, showing synchronized placement along temporal ruler.

Preview window positioned at upper right displays current frame of project media, showing partial close-up of an anthropomorphic animated figure with rounded head and mechanical eye components. Adjacent panel to preview includes audio meter with decibel scale, registering levels for stereo output.

Additional interface elements include project bin at upper left containing media files and sequences, toolbar with selection, cutting, and adjustment icons, and menu bar across top of application window with standard file, edit, and sequence options.

Lower portion of image outside software interface includes cropped text “BWW,” likely unrelated watermark or external overlay.

Overall screenshot functions as technical depiction of export configuration process within digital video post-production workflow, emphasizing encoding parameters, timeline organization, and preview functionality.
 
  Getting more posts...