WhyNotZoidberg, to fallout
@WhyNotZoidberg@topspicy.social avatar

I'm sorry I am still on the bandwagon (and of course it got me playing Fallout 4 again) but damn Teagan Meredith is just awesome.

JPK_elmediat, to scifi
@JPK_elmediat@c.im avatar
metin, to art

Retro-futuristic interior design. I'm a stylized character modeler, not an architectural visualizer or interior designer, but it can be fun to explore other visual disciplines. 🙂

Modeled and rendered using MagicaCSG.

#3d #visualization #visualisation #visualizer #interior #design #retro #retrofuturistic #retrofuturism #illustration #art #magicacsg #mastoart #fediart

cazabon, to random

They say if you sell your crafts, post about them. OK.

I love the future - the future of the 1970s, not what we got. TLDR - I created light props to resemble the blinking computers of 1970s scifi futuristic movies. I sell them as kits on Etsy; all you do is solder the LEDs to the board.

The slow-flashing LEDs drift out of sync and make patterns that fool your brain that something deeper is going on. This is the bigger one, the Super-Computron 4500.

#electronics #kit #1970s #future

The Super-Computron 4500 is a light prop/effect that resembles the blinking computer panels in 1970s scifi movies set in the future. It displays a continually changing pattern of dots in an 18x18 grid (324 LEDs total), and is 150mm / 6 inches square. This one features green LEDs. The author sells them in kit form in a variety of colours from his Etsy shop. https://www.etsy.com/shop/RetroFutureTech

cazabon,

Blue is very, very popular, despite it not being seen much in 1970s movies, and blue LEDs weren't common until well into the 2000s. But people like them.

My favourites are the classic colours of the 70s movies - red, amber, green. And I like the rainbow-morphing effect a lot. On the Super-Computron 4500, the rainbow morph is amazing.

This is how it looks in classic red.

#1970s #retro #future #retrofuturistic #electronic #kit

A Super-Computron 4500 light prop reminiscent of supercomputers in 1970s scifi movies. It is an 18x18 array of 324 blinking LEDs.

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