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My repo is [https://github.com/FairyCup/Principia-Textilica-Course here]. | My repo is [https://github.com/FairyCup/Principia-Textilica-Course here]. | ||
= | = "Complex Community and Destructive Craft"= | ||
=== Principia Textilica : Project Documentation === | |||
= Principia Textilica = | |||
== Context == | == Context == | ||
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=== Method and Tools === | === Method and Tools === | ||
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Image:img_17-3-10-2-8.png|Connection lines between (dead) fish of 7 generations | Image:img_17-3-10-2-8.png|Connection lines between (dead) fish of 7 generations | ||
Image:tankA_trace_17-3-10-2-8_1.png|Traces of the movement of the fish while living | Image:tankA_trace_17-3-10-2-8_1.png|Traces of the movement of the fish while living | ||
</gallery> | |||
For my first practical trial run I use evenweave with approximately 2mm per unit. | |||
To limit the size I scale down the computed positions to fit a 100 by 100 grid (resulting in appr. 20cm by 20cm for the finished piece). The yellow thread is used as a counting help. | |||
Because my generations of fish are based on the number 2, I also need thread based on number 2. So I use cotton wool threads each already containing 8 (=2^3) sub-threads when feazed.<br />To be able to manage the threads and associate them with one fish id I simply attach some paper to the string groups. The positions are directly read from the text in the log file. | |||
<gallery perrow=6 widths=450px heights=250px mode="packed-overlay" caption="Used material"> | |||
Image:stoffraster.png|Base material as canvas | |||
Image:fadendetail.png|Applied cotton wool | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
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Unlike techniques such as stitching or weaving where the interaction between up and down movements is crucial, the destruction concept I want to explore is independent from that. That means I need a more robust canvas. I use a non-textile base, namely a semi-see-through PVC sheet. Although it is possible to cut holes in the PVC for guiding the threads, as said before, this would artificially add something to the concept that does not belong to it. Instead, a hot glue gun is used to fixate the splitting points and keep the strings neatly in place. Pieces of a series can be stacked and the viewer can easily compare the different layouts of the strings. | Unlike techniques such as stitching or weaving where the interaction between up and down movements is crucial, the destruction concept I want to explore is independent from that. That means I need a more robust canvas. I use a non-textile base, namely a semi-see-through PVC sheet. Although it is possible to cut holes in the PVC for guiding the threads, as said before, this would artificially add something to the concept that does not belong to it. Instead, a hot glue gun is used to fixate the splitting points and keep the strings neatly in place. Pieces of a series can be stacked and the viewer can easily compare the different layouts of the strings. | ||
For the threads I use the same type of cotton wool as with experiment number one (in white instead of blue), but only 6 generations, meaning | For the threads I use the same type of cotton wool as with experiment number one (in white instead of blue), but only 6 generations, meaning 2^5 = 32 sub-threads which equals 4 of the normal threads. The wool is hand-dyed to achieve a color gradient from dark blue to green to yellow to white, which aids the visual understanding of distinct generations. The dyeing process makes it more difficult to feaze the threads. | ||
=== Result === | === Result === | ||
<gallery perrow=6 widths=300px heights=200px caption="Finished piece"> | |||
Image:texpiece1.png|total | |||
Image:texpiece1detail.png|detail | |||
</gallery> | |||
There are four templates for the finished pieces, including the default setting, the privateRadius = 50 setting, the interpolationSpeed = 350 setting and the timetoSpawn = 3000 setting. | |||
I am satisfied with the result, as it fulfills the goals I set before. There are definitely alternatives for the fixation method, but at this point the glue dots, which are quite visible despite being transparent, act as subtle placeholder for the fish bodies. Additionally, while working with the threads, some aspects emerged that I did not actively take into account in the planning phase. The first is the overlapping of the threads, naturally falling into place if the correct order of the fish births and deaths is maintained. The second is the color imperfection as a result of the (amateur) hand-dyeing. The dye did not touch any fibers below the surface of the initially whole thread, as a consequence the feazed threads partly stayed white. Both aspects fit beautifully into the whole concept, the latter one especially adds another element to the destructive dimension. | |||
= Conclusion = | = Conclusion = | ||
We see crafting usually as a process of creation, building, fixing and making. But most crafting techniques have destructive aspects in between: we cut fabric into pieces before sewing and we remove excess threads when knitting. I started with an artificial, minimal life form, that moves, gives birth and dies and interacts with the other life forms in a complex way, based on a set of simple rules. I explored variations of the rules and observed changes in the complex behaviour of the life forms, developping both expected and surprising features as outcome. Then I turned its heritage into a destructive textile piece, where I consciously nullified the effort of making a thread from several fibres, by feazing and dissecting it. | We see crafting usually as a process of creation, building, fixing and making. But most crafting techniques have destructive aspects in between: we cut fabric into pieces before sewing and we remove excess threads when knitting. I started with an artificial, minimal life form, that moves, gives birth and dies and interacts with the other life forms in a complex way, based on a set of simple rules. I explored variations of the rules and observed changes in the complex behaviour of the life forms, developping both expected and surprising features as outcome. Then I turned its heritage into a destructive textile piece, where I consciously nullified the effort of making a thread from several fibres, by feazing and dissecting it. | ||
<references /> | <references /> |
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