¡Hay que ver cómo se estropean los cuerpos! (Pilar, my beloved grandmother)
My grandmother was a master of sewing. When she was young, she worked as dressmaker, and her profession became a hobby with the passage of time. I remember her doing cross-stitch, embroidering tablecloths and doing crochet. I have some of her artworks at home. She spent many hours patiently in silence, moving her knitting needles: my grandmother didn’t use to get bored. As she did with her threads, this drawing is done linking lines:
You can find the code here. If you check it, you will see that the stitches of drawings are defined by a function that I called pattern
, which depends on some parameters that I define randomly. This is why each time you run it, you will get a different drawing:
From the technical side, I used accumulate
function from purrr
package, which makes loops faster and more efficient.
Drawings remind me those I created here, imitating the way that plants arrange their leaves. If you are interesting in using R to create art, check out this free DataCamp’s project.
Amazing, thanks!
Very cool! Any suggestions for making them 3D?
Very cool! Any suggestions on making 3d versions?
Thank you. May you try someting like this
https://fronkonstin.com/2014/11/11/3d-harmonographs-in-motion/
This guy converted a previous experiment of mine in 2D to 3D adding the third dim inspired in previous ones. Let me know if you try. Good luck! 🙂