See, the thing is, your cat doesn’t actually hate you, per se. It simply prefers the more refined tastes of its imaginary lounging companion. Spread Motion Design filmed and animated this amusing short while Wolfpeople provided the score. More »
Whaddya mean you don’t swallow your own hair? The 19-year-old woman that inspired this twisted animation from David O’Reilly certainly did. Then again she also had a four-pound hairball surgically removed from her intestinal tract. More »
Ben Crouse has done what some have said could never be done—he’s captured the spirit of the World Wide Web, animated it into a six minute short, and put it back on the Internet. Hella meta. [Cartoon Brew] More »
Mixing serene stop-motion scenes with abstract 3D animation, digital artist Mitch Myers delivers a haunting vision of his dreams. Which are apparently far better than my dreams. Those typically involve me running from hordes of the undead while dragging a footlocker full of avocados. Go figure. More »
Gird your loins and prepare for another bizarre expedition into Nick Cross’ warped imagination. As the animator explains, More »
The creatives over at Light & Hevvy produced this stunning retelling of On the Concept of History by German philosopher and literary critic, Walter Bendix Schönflies Benjamin. Per thesis IX: More »
What do you get when you overlay 19 classic video game tracks and television theme songs atop one another and play them on hacked NES controllers? This. More »
Canon EOS Rebel SL1: The Shrunken Down Beginner DSLR You’ve Been Waiting For
Posted in: Today's Chili Last year’s Canon T4i is a really excellent camera. But for all its whiz-bang features like a capacitive touchscreen and continuous autofocus while shooting video, it just didn’t feel special. A DSLR for beginners just doesn’t make as much sense when there are smaller mirrorless cameras that can achieve similar results. So Canon shrunk the T4i down. Here’s the mini version, Canon EOS Rebel SL1. More »
In a stunning display of interpretive dance, Apparition answers the burning question: “What choreography emerges when software is your partner?” This interactive media performance was created and directed by Klaus Obermaier with help from the Ars Electronica Futurelab and performed by Rob Tannion. More »