This was done as a collaboration between myself and Avneeth Srikrishna. His octagram piece caught my eye and I decided to create this infinite zoom piece from it.
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Credits: Avneeth Srikrishna, Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
This was done as a collaboration between myself and Avneeth Srikrishna. His octagram piece caught my eye and I decided to create this infinite zoom piece from it.
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Credits: Avneeth Srikrishna, Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
This animation features all five of the platonic solids in one place!
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
“Icosahedron” this is the 5th and final platonic solid. It has 20 triangular faces, 12 vertices, and 30 edges. – if you look closely you might be able to catch it appearing to spin backwards.
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
“Dodecahedron” the dodecahedron is a platonic solid that has 12 pentagonal faces, 20 vertices and 30 edges!
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
This is the “Octahedron” – A sort of double pyramid that is a platonic solid – that is each vertex is equal, each face is equal, and each edge is equal. The platonic solids are a symbol of equality everywhere.
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
This is the platonic solid that most people are familiar with – it has 6 faces, 8 vertices, and 12 edges.
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
My first work rendering 3D shapes in motion graphics software. This is the simplest of the 5 platonic solids and features 4 faces, 4 vertices and 6 edges.
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
I took this animation even deeper and made it more kaleidoscope like – this is one of my first ventures into fully computer generated work.
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
This one is a manipulation that I made from the last gif. If you watch each loop does not bring it back to the beginning. It takes 12 loops to start at the top again!
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry
An animation I created that shows 6 circles interacting with each other.
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Credits: Ansel Bickerton and Sacred Geometry