[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago

Feels like the answer must be technically yes, but practically no. Would make a great xkcd "what if."

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 2 points 4 weeks ago

Hahaha touche - it's at Joshua Tree national park in the US

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Joshua Tree (lemmy.world)

This has been a fun one - I was testing using more traditional pen plotter techniques (wiggly lines) to drive color instead of dwell time. It's really interesting how it comes out, the way the anodizing affects neighboring lines create a bit of a natural averaging that makes the whole thing look 'higher resolution' than the same thing drawn with just ink. Here's a closeup of the lines - pretty cool!

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

Thank you! I'm really proud of this one.

62
Tri Not (lemmy.world)

New print! This one played with a new technique. I noticed there is a speed that makes resonant vibrations in the pen plotter. This entire print runs at that speed, giving the colors some texture from the vibrations. The color variation comes from repeated passes over the same areas.

46
Square Flower (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 months ago by scribbler@lemmy.world to c/artshare@lemmy.world

Another titanium print! This one is super geometric - the basis of the print is just a bunch of squares/diamonds rotated around a central point, the visual complexity comes from the combination of how they overlap and motion control of my pen plotter (specifically that it needs to accelerate and decelerate as it changes directions).

12
Cyclometry #5 (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 months ago by scribbler@lemmy.world to c/artshare@lemmy.world

I've been playing around with more abstract stuff lately - I'm doing a series of prints that are basically just weird circles, hence the goofy old timey name of cyclometry :) The colors on this came out really neat in person!

2
Pillars of Creation (lemmy.world)
submitted 3 months ago by scribbler@lemmy.world to c/artshare@lemmy.world

Newest titanium print! It's of a region in the Eagle nebula, originally captured by the Hubble telescope. Space seemed like a cool place to explore a little more of the colorspace available in this process. Plate is 12"x18", image is ~9.5"x14".

I'm really happy with how this one came out, the background 'sky' is a gradienting deep iridescent blue, and the nebula itself hits some cool magentas, yellows, and a bluish-green that can't make its mind on what color it wants to be depending on angle and lighting.

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

Thanks so much! I'm glad you enjoy them, I'll keep posting!

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

It is somewhat closer to traditional photography, but it's using an electrochemical process to create the colors. I'm so sorry I can't tell you more details right now, I'll quote my comment on details below. Once I file a patent on this I'll make a detailed post here on my process. Assuming it even gets granted I intend to make it free for individuals (but not corporations) to use.

So I'm going to just say it's an electrochemical anodization process for now. The detail comes from a new process I've been developing over the last month or so that I'm going to be filing a patent on soon. I'll be happy to share with you all once I've done so, but I the idea of Elon Musk maybe seeing one of these posts and using my process to make a fleet of printed titanium cyber trucks using my process would make me sad.

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 2 points 3 months ago

So I'm going to just say it's an electrochemical anodization process for now. The detail comes from a new process I've been developing over the last month or so that I'm going to be filing a patent on soon. I'll be happy to share with you all once I've done so, but I the idea of Elon Musk maybe seeing one of these posts and using my process to make a fleet of printed titanium cyber trucks using my process would make me sad.

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

No worries, it's very niche! In titanium means I'm "printing" an anodization (protective oxide layer) on a titanium surface. Titanium and Niobium have a unique property the oxide layer that forms on their surfaces is transparent, and extremely thin (think <1000 nanometers). The colors come from the incoming light constructively and destructively interfering in that oxide layer, so there are no pigments or dyes used in the process.

86
submitted 3 months ago by scribbler@lemmy.world to c/artshare@lemmy.world

Apologies for the less than stellar lighting. This was my biggest print so far, just under 18"x 18"! I'm really happy with the details, but printing something this big was definitely a learning experience for me. It took 3 attempts to get this image out, but I learned a lot about tubing management and maintaining chemistry I can think about while I sand down my previous botched attempts :D

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 10 points 3 months ago

The premise is she's a prostitute who found a legal loophole, she doesn't charge for sex she charges for the condom.

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago

Damn. I need to go home and think about my life.

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

Not the spacing, but it affects the width of the lines.

123
submitted 3 months ago by scribbler@lemmy.world to c/artshare@lemmy.world

Another anodized titanium piece - this one is playing with line work. The color variation is from varying dwell time, which changes for each hexagon in a rolling pattern, as well as from the interactions between the hexagons.

[-] scribbler@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

Very similar! Both colors are formed by oxide layers on the surface, I think with stainless steel it's a mixture of iron and chrome oxides. In the case of titanium there is only one oxide, TiO2, which is transparent crystal (in thin forms). The TiO2 layer is thin, on the order of hundreds of nanometers so the colors you see are a result of light waves constructively and destructively interacting with the transparent layer of TiO2 on the surface of the titanium sheet.

15
Titanium Sunset (lemmy.world)
submitted 3 months ago by scribbler@lemmy.world to c/artshare@lemmy.world

First post here - I’ve been experimenting with creating art by selectively anodizing titanium. Patterning anodized titanium isn’t new, but this process allows me to create full pictures, which I think is the first time this has ever been done.

This piece started off as a photo of a beach at sunset that I color mapped into the anodized Ti spectrum and printed.

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scribbler

joined 8 months ago