The free scrapbooking videos you can watch online cover a variety of scrapbooking topics, from easy-to-follow advice and tips
covering layout and design, to more specific projects using scrapping products like frames, fonts, slogans, clipart, and
scrapbooking papers.
Some of the videos are better than others, but all are designed not only to entertain, but also to help you with your scrapbooking projects
by providing you with ideas, motivation, and inspiration to make your memories that much more special.
Scrapbooking can be defined as the art of presenting your photos and memories in "scrapbooks", hence the
term scrapbooking. Rather than showing off your photos in a standard and rather boring photo album,
think how much more effective it would be to pull out a colorful, eye-grabbing display of
your prized memories to show your visitors.
Scrapbooking can do this for you, without costing a fortune.
And no, you don't have to buy a large scrapbooking kit to get started, you can simply buy
bits and pieces as you progress with your scrapbook. Your only initial expense is the
blank scrapbook itself.
There is no set way to organize your scrapbook, some people prefer to organize in chronological
order and some don't, it doesn't really matter, as long as you're happy with the overall result. Hopefully this
collection of scrapbooking videos will give you fresh ideas and stir your creativity.
Complete video at: http://fora.tv/2006/06/26/Will... designer Will Wright and musician Brian Eno discuss the generative systems used in their respective creative works. This...
[ UPDATE!! for higher quality sound, watch this here: http://www.vimeo.com/931182 ]This is a sample output of something I've been working on lately....
Some user feedback on 'always something somewhere else', a generative locative media experience built using the new Hewlett Packard mScape software. For more info visit...
A simple generative thing i whipped together in Reaktor the other night. Makes for some interesting (and quite eerie) dark-room fun. Sorry about the piss...
Jonathan McCabe's artificially evolved systems art"The patterns are made by repeated foldings, rotations and shifts, and then each point is coloured depending on its positions...