Frederik Vanhoutte Generative Art on Flickr
Absolutely loving the latest work from Frederik that popped up on my Flickr Processing Group feed. The neon colour scheme is almost 80’s in feel but it really works for me.
Absolutely loving the latest work from Frederik that popped up on my Flickr Processing Group feed. The neon colour scheme is almost 80’s in feel but it really works for me.
…to my mate Marc for letting him down royally and not doing his website for him when I said I probably could I thought I’d at least let you know that his site is up and full of yummy graphic design that he’s done.
After some prompting I though I would publish some of my Processing source code to see what people made of it. Probably not the tidiest code out there, but these are essentially sketches so figured it didn’t matter too much.
To make this work you’ll need a few bits from around the internets. First up is the FFTOctaveAnalyser class from Dave Bollinger which you need to put in the root of your sketch directory, then you’ll need to download the Ess library.
Finally you’ll need something like Audacity to split an audio file into it’s left and right channels. Save them as two mono wav files (for some reason AIFF seems to upset it) called <audiofile>.L and <audiofile>.R and pop them in the sketch data directory.
Assuming all this has gone to plan all you need to do is edit the source code on line 4 so the audioFilename variable is the same as the <audiofile> referenced above and click the play button. Give it a second or two (depending on the length of the audio file) and you should see the Audio DNA displayed and find a TIFF version sitting in a folder called ‘out’ in your sketch folder.
Onto the source. The key to this is it’s not real time. It scans the audio file chunk by chunk so in this instance it’s faster than real-time. With some tweaks a similar technique can be used to render out audio reactive Processing sketches that run slower than real-time if that’s your bag.