Droppin’ some Saturday science:
- We come in colors: “Brainbow” uses fluroescent proteins to let scientists see the individual neurons within mouse brains. [Via]
- X to the Ray:
- Nick Veasey makes nifty X-Ray photography [Via]. I thought his feather scans looked familiar, and sure enough, he’s the guy behind the Creative Suite 2 artwork.
- SFMOMA used X-rays to uncover a hidden Picasso buried beneath another artist’s work.
- Elsewhere I stumbled upon a collection of 15 weird X-rays. The nailgun victims remind me of work done by a props master I met on the set of CSI a couple years back. He’d carved out a niche creating realistic depictions of trauma, going from raw materials to on-set print in just a few minutes.
- Photoshop-for-technical-imaging expert George Reis has released Photoshop CS3 for Forensics Professionals: A Complete Digital Imaging Course for Investigators. PhotoshopSupport.com has the details, plus a link to a sample chapter (PDF).
- Evidently birds see magnetic fields. [Via] (File next to squirrels with infrared-emitting tails.)
- And you thought your inkjet was precise: IBM prints with molecules. (Please, guys: draw angels on the head of a pin…)
- Morbid Anatomy blogs about the intersections of “art and medicine, death and culture.” They cover, among other things, a recent “Anatomy as Art” auction at Christie’s.
- Elsewhere in news of medical curiosities, check out this hard-shelled pushmi-pullyu.[Via]
- ScienceFaction offers scient-oriented stock imagery, while Fahad Sulehria “studies the science of art and the art of science” with his scientific illustrations.
The ‘sample chapter’ for George Reis’ book is the index ….
the Brainbow brainwiring looks interesting ..kinda like old photoshop plugs 🙂
http://www.photoky.com/Artist.asp?ArtistID=14786&Akey=LNDFM7X3
I had thyroid cancer in 2005 and took my MRI and did a photoshop “thing” to it.
I thought you might enjoy my art of my cancer………
[Sounds like a very interesting project, Ken, though I’m having trouble finding the work on your site. Could you provide specifics on how to find it? (Sorry if I’m dense.) –J.]