GMU:Processing im Park/Jessica Hüttig

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This is the »Processing im Park« page of — Jessica Hüttig

I uploaded some pictures, I took for this course on Flickr.
The code for my sketches can be viewed on OpenProcessing.

Homework I – SLIDESHOW

For the first homework we had to create an animation of nine photos, we took in the Ilmpark
Code for this sketch can be viewed here.

Additionally we created a simple grid of nine photos.
Code for this sketch can be viewed here

Animated park200px.gif
Park grid.png


Homework II – CUT THE IMAGE UP

In class we learned how to dice images into any number of tiles and how to arrange them in a random order
or a systematic one. The first image is the original one and in the second example it's diced and rearranged randomly
into 49 tiles. Click here to view the code.

Original.png
Random tiles.png


Furthermore one example diced into only one row and flipped horizontal and the second one diced
into one column and rearranged randomly.

Flipped horizontal.png
One column.png


For the second homework we had to pick a type of collage, we want to recreate from a link section.
I've choosen this one for reference. Wanna see the code? CLICK!

001.png
002.png


Homework III – BRUSH

Let's animate a bit more!
We had to walk around an object and take a few photos, so we will have a panorama-ish view of it.
I chose an adversiting column...

Brush-ac.png


Homework IV – SOUNDBOARD

Our task was to create a soundboard of the Ilmpark by using the audio-snippets we recorded
a few weeks ago in the Parkhöhlen. Additionally we had to draw a map of the park, mark several points,
where we want to play our audio-files and highlight the location, that is currently playing.
Code can be viewed on OpenProcessing.

Soundboard-ilmpark-2.png


Homework V – VIDEO PROCESSING

We had to create a sketch, that loads one of our videos from the park, change the characteristic of it and export
it using the Movie Maker in Processing. I've decided to display every pixel as a stroke. You can change the weight
of the stroke by moving the mouse on the y-axis. View the video and the code.

Thin-stroke.png
Thicker-stroke.png