New Design for Moillusions.com! | Mighty Optical Illusions

The second one is far more interesting for me. Obviously the nautilus shell reveals a man and a woman in a clear embrace. however where the shell opens up there is the “Light. I also really don’t like the way the Facebook/Tweet share box follows me down the screen, like it is asking if I want to share each different comment. The blue stripes on either side really brought color to your site. The links at the top should have a bar of their own, in a contrasting color, to really bring them out. I really like these illusions. that said, I really enjoy this site. it is one of the few sites that I regularly visit simply for the content and nothing more. Two very nice illusions that are so loaded with innuendos and messages for and from just about whatever one perscribes too. It would be okay if the box were stationary or right under the illusion, but that it is always in the same spot no matter where I scroll is driving me crazy. The faces in the clouds as well as the circular wisp of some of the others could represent a heaven, someone looking down, or a whole different creation process. maybe some color would help- but no fluorescents. Not to mention the guy in the boat and the illusion of maybe a head at lower left. The culture of the art almost looks as though “Humans are at Harvest” as indicated by the branches that the primary image(s) are suspended through. The site- I am with the people about the background- I can’t tell if it is white or grey but either is too much for the eyes. Add some color, Vurdlak. I’d better submit this one. Also, remove the ad at the top and replace it with a header of your own. I was okay with the blue. ” All cultures are just about conclusive on what the light means: Life, being alive. I love em’ and they’re great. Also they throughout the piece they look as though there are pods of other plants and pic-to-graphs or cave drawings. I absolutely love what you’ve done here and are continuing to do. it’s exciting. Otherwise they’re lost in the sea of text. com/ may give you some ideas. http://colorschemedesigner.

See Chambered Nautilus Up Close And Personal

We were lucky to swim with these special creatures!





Up & Coming 2011 review: In printmakers' show, image is everything

It would be difficult to be more innovative as a printmaker than Rhys Himsworth. Instead of carving a block of wood or etching a plate with acid, Himsworth has reconfigured a medical cardiograph machine as a printmaking device. You hold two wired paddles up to a face and they “read” its galvanic aura: The result is a black-and-white printout that looks a little like a cross between the Shroud of Turin and a photo with multiple exposures.

Himsworth’s machine stands in the windowless first-floor gallery of the Hunterdon Art Museum, part of this summer’s “Up & Coming 2011: New Printmakers Make Their Mark,” an exhibit of MFA candidates and graduates from seven East Coast college printmaking departments. It’s student work, but these 12 artists work hard to be as unpredictable as any international print dealers association show could ever be — like, for example, making heart-stopping images with a cardiograph.

So there are pieces like “Rebel,” by Christi Birchfield, made of methyl cellulose and dried flowers arranged around a piece of holographic Mylar, which sits inside its own shaped frame that is sort of like a polyhedron box with a glass cover. And there’s Donna Globus’ “Before & After,” an offset-printed “butterfly box,” a kind of origami in which sheets of paper are carefully folded together to make a decahedron; in Japan, this wannabe soccer ball is often thrown into the air and struck, so each sheet slips apart and drifts slowly to the ground on its own, revealing its separate printed message.

Do you know how to show that the chambered nautilus shell doesnot show the golden ratio?

Do you know anything about the nautilus shell?
Do you know who I can contact for more info on the subject?


Actually it does not show the golden ratio, as the first answerer's first referenced web page states: "The nautilus shell spiral is a logarithmic spiral similar to other spirals such as the Golden Mean or phi spiral, but with slightly different proportions."


It does show the golden ratio (proportion). Here is a site that might help you understand a little better.

http://www.sacredarch.com/sacred_geo_exe r_shell.htm

what is the name of the gray fossil that looks like a nautilus shell?



That must be another cephalopod, an ammonite. There's an amazing diversity of these fossil mollusks, with many genera and species.
Pictures:
http://home.tele2.fr/hildoceras/Amaltheu s_causses.jpg
http://www.mnhn.fr/expo/agesterre/ammoni



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