2:48
Black Mold Exposure documentary film trailer
Black Mold Exposure follows Michael Roland Williams, filmmaker, and Karen Noseff, founder ...
published: 11 Mar 2009
Author: mikeyroll
Black Mold Exposure documentary film trailer
Black Mold Exposure follows Michael Roland Williams, filmmaker, and Karen Noseff, founder and designer of Fortune Denim, struggling to regain their livelihood and well-being after they were unknowingly exposed to high levels of various molds that had infested Karen's apartment. A growing number of people from all ages and walks of life claim mold made them ill while physicians, lawmakers, and medical associations dispute the validity of these claims. Most of the symptoms of those claiming illness from mold can be caused by, and diagnosed as, any number of other illnesses. There are no standardized methods to measure what molds, at what exposure levels, over what period of time, might cause any given person to become ill. BLACK MOLD EXPOSURE explores the bizarre illnesses associated with exposure to toxic mold and the film participants difficult task of regaining their health and lives in an atmosphere of political and social intolerance and disbelief.
4:51
How to make a two-part mold
This video segment will show you how to make a simple two-part mold using Urethane RTV mol...
published: 29 Nov 2006
Author: tapplastics
How to make a two-part mold
This video segment will show you how to make a simple two-part mold using Urethane RTV molding rubber.
2:13
Slime mold
time lapse movie of slime molds and mushrooms...
published: 04 Mar 2008
Author: euftepan
Slime mold
time lapse movie of slime molds and mushrooms
3:35
Toxic Black Mold Syndrome
Dr. Elizabeth Vaughan...
published: 08 Apr 2009
Author: deadmet
Toxic Black Mold Syndrome
Dr. Elizabeth Vaughan
4:50
How It's Made Plastic injection molds
...
published: 07 Oct 2009
Author: Sciencebox2010
How It's Made Plastic injection molds
4:48
Mold Time Lapse
Special shooting aspergillus fumigatus botrytis mucor trichoderma cladosporium mus. "...
published: 12 Feb 2009
Author: Lariontsev
Mold Time Lapse
Special shooting aspergillus fumigatus botrytis mucor trichoderma cladosporium mus. "Berceuse" by Amethystium lariontsev.livejournal.com
4:36
How to make silicone candy molds, cheap!
Uses Sculpy/Fimo, Amazing Mold Putty, and white chocolate for casting custom candies! Good...
published: 18 Jan 2008
Author: gryphern
How to make silicone candy molds, cheap!
Uses Sculpy/Fimo, Amazing Mold Putty, and white chocolate for casting custom candies! Good for ice cubes and Jell-o too! gryphern.googlepages.com For organized listing of content
9:57
Mold making basics: Silicone Block Mold
Block mold explanation. This is the most basic mold method for silicone rubber. This is a ...
published: 26 Jul 2008
Author: brickintheyard
Mold making basics: Silicone Block Mold
Block mold explanation. This is the most basic mold method for silicone rubber. This is a good method when speed is more important than overall cost. We used 73-45 platinum silicone for this particular mold. A cut block mold like this works best with rubber that is shore A20 or higher. This means a medium rubber. Soft rubber such as Gel-10 would be too soft and would distort at the seams.
0:25
Bread Mold
Bread bold is a typical fungus with its distinguishing hypae that grow to form a mycelium....
published: 16 May 2008
Author: kosasihiskandarsjah
Bread Mold
Bread bold is a typical fungus with its distinguishing hypae that grow to form a mycelium. From this network of hypae develop the reproductive zygospore.
1:42
John Bonner's slime mold movies
Biology Professor Emeritus John Bonner's microscope films show the curiously collectiv...
published: 22 Jan 2010
Author: princetonuniversity
John Bonner's slime mold movies
Biology Professor Emeritus John Bonner's microscope films show the curiously collective nature of slime molds. Read more: www.princeton.edu
1:33
Ice Ball Mold - Japanese Bartending Magic
Available from Japan at IceBallMold.com...
published: 16 Dec 2009
Author: IceBallMold
Ice Ball Mold - Japanese Bartending Magic
Available from Japan at IceBallMold.com
5:36
How To Fiberglass - Mold Layup
My next video. www.youtube.com Information and a demonstration of how I layup one of my mo...
published: 17 Mar 2008
Author: punk28186
How To Fiberglass - Mold Layup
My next video. www.youtube.com Information and a demonstration of how I layup one of my molds. Headlight eyelids. Big thanks to Randy Roach(GlasserGlass) for some handy tips and some inspiration to make a vid or two. EDIT(30/May/08): I noticed this video has got 7000 views in 2 months so it looks like ill do another one for you all. Considering how many people are viewing this video I thought I would clear up any misunderstanding and give allot more text info here relating to the video. I only put one wax application on this mold because its an older mold and its been well used. For fresh molds you must put several layers of wax on and I would consider PVA as well if the mold is less then a week old. Always use PVA (or equivalent) on your plug surface before molding. Ive got allot of PMs about the gun. The gun used in this video is just a very cheap method of spraying gelcoat on some of my smaller molds. For the larger parts, tooling gelcoat or for anything I want precision, I use a HLVP gun with a 3.5mm tip. Most of the time for these small parts I just brush gelcoats, you can get just as good results. When brushing leave longer then usual before resin/CSM, I usually leave it overnight. This is so that any high spots from the bristle streaks have time to fully cure. If you layup over any wet gelcoat you will get alligatoring(crocodiling) reactions on the surface. There is no maximuim time between gelcoat and resin/CSM. Gelcoats do not contain wax which means they will <b>...</b>
5:15
Killing Toxic Black Mold - How to Remove Mold Safely
www.HowToHomeInsulation.com - Killing toxic black mold is easier than you might think. Jus...
published: 19 Mar 2011
Author: HowToHomeInsulation
Killing Toxic Black Mold - How to Remove Mold Safely
www.HowToHomeInsulation.com - Killing toxic black mold is easier than you might think. Just be safe and take the necessary precautions when removing large areas of mold. In this video you'll learn how to remove mold according to the most of the EPA recommendations. The complete EPA Guide to Mold Removal is available at http
Vimeo results:
1:45
TO UNDERSTAND IS TO PERCEIVE PATTERNS
By @jason_silva and @notthisbody - Follow us on Twitter!
Our other videos:
Beginning of ...
published: 24 Dec 2011
Author: Jason Silva
TO UNDERSTAND IS TO PERCEIVE PATTERNS
By @jason_silva and @notthisbody - Follow us on Twitter!
Our other videos:
Beginning of Infinity - http://vimeo.com/29938326
You are a RCVR - http://vimeo.com/27671433
Imagination - http://vimeo.com/34902950
Abundance - http://vimeo.com/34984088
INSPIRATION:
The Imaginary Foundation says "To Understand Is To Perceive Patterns"...
Albert-László Barabási, author of LINKED, wants you to think about NETWORKS:
“Networks are everywhere. The brain is a network of nerve cells connected by axons, and cells themselves are networks of molecules connected by biochemical reactions. Societies, too, are networks of people linked by friendships, familial relationships and professional ties. On a larger scale, food webs and ecosystems can be represented as networks of species. And networks pervade technology: the Internet, power grids and transportation systems are but a few examples. Even the language we are using to convey these thoughts to you is a network, made up of words connected by syntactic relationships.”
'For decades, we assumed that the components of such complex systems as the cell, the society, or the Internet are randomly wired together. In the past decade, an avalanche of research has shown that many real networks, independent of their age, function, and scope, converge to similar architectures, a universality that allowed researchers from different disciplines to embrace network theory as a common paradigm.'
Steven Johnson, author of Where Good Ideas Come From, writes about recurring patterns and liquid networks:
“Coral reefs are sometimes called “the cities of the sea”, and part of the argument is that we need to take the metaphor seriously: the reef ecosystem is so innovative because it shares some defining characteristics with actual cities. These patterns of innovation and creativity are fractal: they reappear in recognizable form as you zoom in and out, from molecule to neuron to pixel to sidewalk. Whether you’re looking at original innovations of carbon-based life, or the explosion of news tools on the web, the same shapes keep turning up... when life gets creative, it has a tendency to gravitate toward certain recurring patterns, whether those patterns are self-organizing, or whether they are deliberately crafted by human agents”
Patrick Pittman from Dumbo Feather adds:
“Put simply: cities are like ant colonies are like software is like slime molds are like evolution is like disease is like sewage systems are like poetry is like the neural pathways in our brain. Everything is connected.
"...Johnson uses ‘The Long Zoom’ to define the way he looks at the world—if you concentrate on any one level, there are patterns that you miss. When you step back and simultaneously consider, say, the sentience of a slime mold, the cultural life of downtown Manhattan and the behavior of artificially intelligent computer code, new patterns emerge.”
James Gleick, author of THE INFORMATION, has written how the cells of an organism are nodes in a richly interwoven communications network, transmitting and receiving, coding and decoding and how Evolution itself embodies an ongoing exchange of information between organism and environment.. (Its an ECO-SYSTEM, an EVOLVING NETWORK)
“If you want to understand life,” Wrote Richard Dawkins, “don’t think about vibrant, throbbing gels and oozes, think about information technology." (AND THINK ABOUT NETWORKS!!
Geoffrey West, from The Santa Fe Institute, also believes in the pivotal role of NETWORKS:
"...Network systems can sustain life at all scales, whether intracellularly or within you and me or in ecosystems or within a city.... If you have a million citizens in a city or if you have 1014 cells in your body, they have to be networked together in some optimal way for that system to function, to adapt, to grow, to mitigate, and to be long term resilient."
Author Paul Stammetts writes about The Mycelial Archetype: He compares the mushroom mycelium with the overlapping information-sharing systems that comprise the Internet, with the networked neurons in the brain, and with a computer model of dark matter in the universe. All share this densely intertwingled filamental structure.
An article in Reality Sandwich called Google a psychedelically informed superpowered network, a manifestation of the mycelial archetype:
“Recognizing this super-connectivity and conductivity is often accompanied by blissful mindbody states and the cognitive ecstasy of multiple "aha's!" when the patterns in the mycelium are revealed. That Googling that has become a prime noetic technology (How can we recognize a pattern and connect more and more, faster and faster?: superconnectivity and superconductivity) mirrors the increased speed of connection of thought-forms from cannabis highs on up. The whole process is driven by desire not only for these blissful states in and of themselves, but also as the cognitive resource they represent.The devices of
3:01
NOISY JELLY
Note : This project is a fully working prototype made with Arduino and Max/Msp, there are ...
published: 19 Mar 2012
Author: Raphaël Pluvinage
NOISY JELLY
Note : This project is a fully working prototype made with Arduino and Max/Msp, there are absolut no sound editing in the video...
More picture at this flickr set (http://www.flickr.com/photos/raphaelplu/sets/72157629621382055/)
And download the Project pdf here (http://pluvinage.eu/NOISYJELLY_presskit.pdf)
Noisy jelly is a game where the player has to cook and shape his own musical material, based on coloured jelly.
With this noisy chemistry lab, the gamer will create his own jelly with water and a few grams of agar agar powder. After added different color, the mix is then pour in the molds. 10 min later, the jelly shape can then be placed on the game board,and by touching the shape, the gamer will activate different sounds.
Technically, the game board is a capacitive sensor, and the variations of the shape and their salt concentration, the distance and the strength of the finger contact are detected and transform into an audio signal.
This object aims to demonstrate that electronic can have a new aesthetic, and be envisaged as a malleable material, which has to be manipulated and experimented.
Author: Raphaël pluvinage (http://pluvinage.eu and twitter (https://twitter.com/#!/rpluvina)
& Marianne Cauvard (http://mariannecauvard.fr)
at L'Ensci Les ateliers (http://ensci.com)
Project done in the semester course of François Azambourg and Clémentine Chambon
Thanks to Roland Cahen for his help (especially sorting out with Max/Msp)
Photo credit: Véronique HUYGHE
Music credit : "Whip it" of Devo
1:58
THE BEGINNING OF INFINITY
By @jason_silva and @notthisbody - Follow us on Twitter!
"The adjacent possible is a kin...
published: 02 Oct 2011
Author: Jason Silva
THE BEGINNING OF INFINITY
By @jason_silva and @notthisbody - Follow us on Twitter!
"The adjacent possible is a kind of shadow future, hovering on the edges of the present state of things, a map of all the ways in which the present can reinvent itself." - Steven Johnson
Our other videos -
You are a RCVR - http://vimeo.com/27671433
To Understand Is To Perceive Patterns - http://vimeo.com/34182381
Imagination - http://vimeo.com/34902950
Abundance - http://vimeo.com/34984088
INSPIRATION:
This video is inspired, in part, by the ideas explored in David Deutsch’s new book, THE BEGINNING OF INFINITY. We hope it moves you.
"The topographical shape and the material constitution of the upper surface of the island of Manhattan, as it exists today, is much less a matter of geology than it is of economics and politics and human psychology. The effects of geological forces were trumped (you might say) by other forces — forces that proved themselves, in the fullness of time, physically stronger. Deutsch thinks the same thing must in the long run be true of the universe as a whole. Stuff like gravitation and dark energy are the sorts of things that determine the shape of the cosmos only in its earliest, and most parochial, and least interesting stages. The rest is going to be a matter of our own intentional doing.." - David Alpert on David Deutsch's new book.
"Some time in the last fifty thousand years, with the invention of culture, the biological evolution of humans ceased and evolution became an epigenetic, cultural phenomenon... technology is the real skin of our species. Humanity, correctly seen in the context of the last five hundred years, is an extruder of technological material. We take in matter that has a low degree of organization; we put it through mental filters, and we extrude jewelry, gospels, space shuttles. This is what we do. We are like coral animals embedded in a technological reef of extruded psychic objects." - Terence Mckenna
**
In our work, we use the tools of editing: we juxtapose 'transcalar' imagery, cutting and overlapping the very small and the very large... From the nano to the galactic, stretching and compressing time, we feature time lapse to reveal the repetitive and recurring patterns across different scales of reality. The aim is to provide multiple perspectives all at once, whose simultaneous presentation might cause spontaneous epiphanies. “These patterns are omnipresent, but only when we see these patterns in a more compressed mode of presentation to we start to attend to them as such.” -- This is KEY!
Paul Stamet's superb book, Mycelium Running, begins with a discussion of what Stamets calls the mycelial archetype. He compares the mushroom mycelium with the overlapping information-sharing systems that comprise the Internet, with the networked neurons in the brain, and with a computer model of dark matter in the universe. All share this densely intertwingled filamental structure.
A recent profile of Stephen Johnson on Dumbo Feather described his work like this:
“Johnson uses ‘The Long Zoom’ to define the way he looks at the world—if you concentrate on any one level, there are patterns that you miss. When you step back and simultaneously consider, say, the sentience of a slime mold, the cultural life of downtown Manhattan and the behaviour of artificially intelligent computer code, new patterns emerge."
On their own, these areas of study are fascinating. Together, a more profound view takes shape.
The article continues, "Put simply: cities are like ant colonies are like software is like slime molds are like evolution is like disease is like sewage systems are like poetry is like the neural pathways in our brain. Everything is connected.”
PERFORMING PHILOSOPHY:
Our stated goal is to re-ignite the art of the "performing philosophers" ... like Timothy Leary and Buckminster Fuller... A post on Space Collective wrote about “thinkers who act as substantial agents of change, who drastically alter the infocologies they interact with, in the process transforming and meshing the different dimensions in which our minds operate.”
We care about the pleasures derived in forming new connections, mash-ups and innovative solutions for the next step in human evolution.
We are working to articulate our understanding through the creation of recombinant media mashups meant to epiphanize audiences----the creating and sharing of awe; "performance philosophy" in an age of collapsing boundaries and exponential creativity.
The director of the Imaginary Foundation described our work as “some kind of Ontological DJ'ing, recompiling the source code of western philosophy by mixing and mashing it up into a form of recombinant creativity, which (hopefully) elevates our understanding from the dry and prosaic, into the sensual and transcendent.”
“The goal is to prove a fresh framework and a new narrative to fill our old storytelling needs in our ever-increasing process of self-descri
22:48
Heartless: The Story of the Tin Man
Whitestone Motion Pictures is proud to present Heartless: The Story of the Tin Man.
Based...
published: 03 May 2010
Author: Whitestone Motion Pictures
Heartless: The Story of the Tin Man
Whitestone Motion Pictures is proud to present Heartless: The Story of the Tin Man.
Based on the backstory of one of the most beloved childrenʼs novels of all time comes the extraordinary love story between a simple woodsman and a beautiful maiden. Not having many possessions but wanting to marry his maiden, the woodsman sets his heart to build a large and beautiful cabin.
L. Frank Baum wrote the back story to the Tin Woodsman in his book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Heartless: The Story of the Tin Man is Whitestone Motion Pictures retelling this little known story of the tragic arc of a beloved character who was once human, made of flesh and blood that turned into tin.
A few credits missing from the film:
Matthew Silva-Art Director, Key Suit maker
Art Department Assistants-Thomas DeSadier, Dustin Fletcher, Bryan Luallen
Tin Man Suit Team:
Bill Johnson – Dept. Head
Matt Silva – Key
Jonathan Thornton – Lead mold maker
Dustin Fletcher& Mathew Dunnaway – Assistants
Follow us at twitter.com/whitestonemp
www.whitestonemotionpictures.com
Find Behind the Scenes and Making the Tinman Footage Here: vimeo.com/10737798, vimeo.com/11384017, vimeo.com/11384692, vimeo.com/11385770
Youtube results:
5:21
Introducing Instant Mold
This is a great product for making your own bits for modeling. Add details to base, should...
published: 27 Jan 2011
Author: coolminiornot
Introducing Instant Mold
This is a great product for making your own bits for modeling. Add details to base, shoulderpads, armor designs etc. Customize your army, and make your own unique models! Just add hot water, use again and again. Get it at www.instantmold.com
21:05
Silicone Sheet Mold
Making a simple silicone sheet mold in order to produce resin castings. The silicone was p...
published: 08 Sep 2011
Author: StiltbeastStudios
Silicone Sheet Mold
Making a simple silicone sheet mold in order to produce resin castings. The silicone was purchased from www.BITYmoldsupply.com as well as the resin. Really great for producing small items.
1:41
How To Mold Fiberglass & Composites. 1 of 8
Part 1 of 8. www.fibreglast.com A Step By Step Guide To Molding Fiberglass. A simple intro...
published: 09 Oct 2008
Author: fibreglast
How To Mold Fiberglass & Composites. 1 of 8
Part 1 of 8. www.fibreglast.com A Step By Step Guide To Molding Fiberglass. A simple introduction to fiberglass mold construction; explained using a model aircraft cowling. From plug, to mold, to finished fiberglass part.
2:54
Greensand Ingot Mold
foundry101.com How easy is it to make an ingot mold? You can place a logo or symbol loosel...
published: 18 Jun 2010
Author: 1castingcowboy
Greensand Ingot Mold
foundry101.com How easy is it to make an ingot mold? You can place a logo or symbol loosely on your wood pattern to create a unique ingot. You can also carve a logo into the wood pattern for a recessed logo.