This page features some very brief examples of
the considerable quantity of visual art and music not seen
and not heard in our commercial work. Please
be our guest and scroll down to experience more.
spheres | selected images | natural close ups | clock faces | music
The art represented below is best viewed at 1024 x 768 pixels. The images are designed to be backgrounds (single image wall paper for a desktop PC) or utilized as a rotating slide show. Any and all of these are free for you to download; please remember to credit the source. By clicking a thumbnail of the image, you will download the larger version.
Spheres (above) was started as an experiment in lighting and diffusion. I wanted to see if I could create, from scratch, items that appeared as if photographed from the actual world. From this theme (the third, fourth and fifth items above) I went backwards and forward to create the birth, life and eternal, ongoing existence of the sphere.
Above is a cross section of work selected from a vast pile of experimentation with colors, extrapolation algorithms and layering. Of note is the fact that the "Snow on Jade Ribs," top row right, was derived from "Internal Discomfort," middle row left.
The images above were collected in experimentation with close range digital imaging, this spring 2003. The subjects (silver maples, balsams, flowers, cedars, etc.) are in our back yard, except for the dogwood flowers, taken at my cousins' home in Roanoke VA, the baseball, which was taken behind the nearby schools here in Morrisville VT and the moss, from our family cabin in Greensboro VT. Clicking on the thumbnail brings up a larger 1024 x 768 JPEG image. Makes lovely computer "wall paper."
The vast majority of inexpensive quartz wall clocks can be easily and simply disassembled and a new face can be installed. Clicking on any of these faces will bring up a very large (and scalable) 300dpi image, same as the thumbnail. One can print out the image out on a color printer in a "photo-ready" resolution, using a heavy gloss or satin paper stock. Use a compass with an Exacto knife to pop a hole in the center for the hand mechanism, and presto, you have a new and original clock that few others have. Email me if you wish the same file in TIFF format.
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content copyright 2002 Peter Bruce Wilder dba Ergo Communications | Best viewed at 800x600 or higher resolution.
[ last updated 04-22-03 ]