Archive for June, 2010

Jun 28 2010

Indoor kite flying

Published by keith under Kites

This is cool

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Jun 18 2010

More on the Prism 3D kite and some on the Acrobatx

Published by keith under Kites

I love the 3D. It will fly as long as you can feel the air on the back of your neck.  I had a great time flying it today, along with an Aerobe (more on that kite later).

I tried flying an Acrobatx in the same wind and it was like flying a rock. I bought the Acrobatx so that I could learn how to do “tricks”. It is supposed to be a good trick kite. Tricks are more than flying the kite forward. In fact, as far as I can tell, tricks are done when the kite is almost stalling.


That’s not me (not even close) but it is an Acrobatx kite.

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Jun 17 2010

A little Phish

Published by keith under Music

Phish – 6/12/10 “Backwards Down The Number Line” from Phish on Vimeo.

A good example of why I like Phish. It has a nice, spacey, feel good jam in it.

Note the it was performed less than a week ago. The audio from all of their shows can be downloaded within hours after the shows are performed. Each show is different so they are always something new.

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Jun 15 2010

Revolution kites and the community

Published by keith under Fractal Art,Kites

I have mixed feelings about my quad line kite. It’s a Revolution 1.5 SLE. Revolution kites have an online community. I am what you call a “lurker” in the Rev kite community. I don’t participate in the forums, but I do read them.

Like all communities, the people involved have a passion for whatever the community is based on. I have to keep that in mind when I observe the community from the outside. Some people treat these Rev kites like a religion. It’s hard for me to relate to that.

Quad kites allow an amazing amount of control. They’re like hummingbirds. They can stop, go in any direction and fly backwards. There are teams of people that fly in choreographed formations. They are the synchronized swimmers of the sky.

I can fly a quad kite. I am just a beginner, but it’s not that hard to fly one. I am to the point where I can have fun rather than wonder if I am using the right technique to control the kite. The question is, how far do I want to go with this?

Last night the wind was perfect. The park’s flying field was almost empty. I started with a 2 line stunt kite with a 100 foot tail attached to it. The challenge was to see what sort of curves that I could create with the tail. The kite drew several onlookers. Cool.

The wind was still good so I thought that I would whip out the quad kite. I did what I could do with it: starting and stopping in multiple orientations, flying upside down and sideways and in reverse and so on. It was boring, so I landed it and went back to the 2 line kite.

What’s wrong with me? Based on some of the passion that is visible in the forums, I thought that once I had a quad kite I wouldn’t go back, but I went back.

Maybe there’s more to it than just the kites. Maybe some of that passion comes from the community. It might be about the team flying and people helping each other with common interests. I am an outsider, but I would be willing to bet that quad kite passion is as much about people hanging out together as it is about flying the kites.

I am convinced that fractal art would not exist if it were not for the passion that is generated in the fractal art community. I know that many people have a hope that fractal art will become greater than it is, but I think it has already arrived at its final destination. Fractal art is the community.

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Jun 14 2010

Light wind kites

Published by keith under Kites

I bought a Prism 3-D kite last week. The 3-D is advertised to be able to fly at winds from 0 to 10 MPH, which is cool because I have been frustrated several times when I have tried to fly without enough wind. The Prism marketing literature says that the 3-D holds the indoor flying record of over 6 hours.

I understand the laws of physics well enough to know that some form of energy needs to be pumped into the system to overcome friction and gravity enough to lift a kite into the air. In other words, there is no such thing as a 0 wind kite. Even if the wind is generated by human movement, it still needs wind. The marketing literature says that walking backwards is enough to keep the 3-D in the air when there is no wind.

OK. I tried that and it didn’t work. It was disappointing because that kite cost almost 80 bucks. I used the 20 foot lines that came with the kite. The idea behind the short lines is to control the kite in “3D” by flying it in all directions. I ended up walking backwards all over the crowded park, mostly dragging the kite along the ground. When I reached maximum embarrassment, I packed it up.

I tried it again last night, this time with 50 foot lines in a slight to calm breeze and a park with fewer people. It was great! The longer lines gave me enough time to compensate for my lack of experience with that kite. When it was calm, walking backwards briskly really did keep it in the air. I’ll practice a few more times with the 50 foot lines and then try it again with the shorter lines.

Prism has replaced the 3-D with the 4-D kite. When I asked the kite shop guy what the difference was between the 3-D and the 4-D, he said that it was just a different year, giving the impression that it was almost the same kite. That’s not exactly true. The 4-D is bigger than the 3-D, but it can be stored in a smaller space. The 3-D doesn’t fit in my kite bag. The 4-D would have. He didn’t have any 4-Ds in stock so I couldn’t do a direct comparison. He gave me a deal on the 3-D and I don’t regret buying it (now), but I would buy the 4-D at full price if I had it to do over again.

If you have a kite collection and you have to travel to open space like I do, storage is a big deal. My kite bag is a former Christmas wrapper roll storage bag. The green material with the red handles looks a little funny on the beach, but that’s OK. It works.

FYI – The 50 foot lines came from my Micron. After the success with the 3-D, I hooked up the Micron to see how it flew in the same wind, or lack thereof. That kite wasn’t going anywhere, even without the tail attached. I wasn’t too surprised. The Micron is a tiny kite that needs a lot of wind.

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Jun 07 2010

Fractal calendars

Published by keith under Fractal Art

A search on Amazon for “fractal calendar” provides several results. I knew about Infinite Creations, Fractal Universe and Fractal Cosmos, but there are a couple of results that I have never heard of.

From the pictures, the images in the calendars seem to be “escape time” fractals as opposed to IFS fractals. I find that interesting because the most popular fractal software, Apophysis, creates IFS fractals, sometimes called “flame” or “smoke” fractals. It seems that none of the calendars represent the type of fractals that most fractal artists are creating today.

I know that you can go to places like Deviantart to buy all sorts of fractal calendars, but Deviantart is not Amazon. Deviantart is a social networking site, so its market is limited to the people who hang out on Deviantart. Amazon is much bigger. I wonder why there isn’t at least one calendar with Apophysis images on Amazon? I understand that it can be a challenge to render flames to print resolution, but it isn’t impossible. It seems like there should be something with a flame in it.

A 2011 Fractal Universe calendar? That’s a surprise. I am speculating, but I would bet that it’s a desktop calendar published by whatever the publishing company changed into after the bankruptcy. In previous years, the desktop calendar used the images from the previous year’s wall calendar, and there is a 2010 wall calendar. That’s just speculation though. I suppose that it’s possible that some other company used the name “Fractal Universe”, but that doesn’t make sense because that name is supposed to be a registered trademark – at least it had an ® next to the name on the old web site. I have no idea what that calendar is about.

Anyway, it is good to see lots of fractal calendars. I still believe that the world does not have enough printed fractals in it. I don’t care much for the style of many of the fractals that they put those calendars, but at least they have some form of fractal in them. The more fractals that there are hanging on walls, the better it is for fractal art. I have said this before: The internet is a bad place to promote fractal art. It needs to be printed.

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Jun 03 2010

A new fractal image

Published by keith under Fractal Art,Personal

Over the long weekend I fired up my old fractal computer and created a new image. It was fun. The image is nothing to get excited about. It’s just another image for my flower series, but it was fun to play with UF again.

On the other hand, I was surprised at how time consuming that it was. Or rather, I was surprised that I noticed how time consuming that it was. I used to spend hours at that computer without giving it a second thought. My priorities have changed.

The image isn’t done. If I do finish it, I’ll put it here.

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Jun 03 2010

2011 Infinite Creations fractal calendar

Published by keith under Fractal Art

A few weeks ago, Daniel, apparently from Orange Circle Studio, left this link:

http://www.orangecirclestudio.com/wall-calendar-store/wall-calendars/conventional/infinite-creations.html

in a comment that he made in my post, Fractal Universe calendar – gone because of bankruptcy?

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