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Around the Web: Paper Press. Tricky Typography. Excellent Electrode. Problematic Poultry. Silk Sensors. Augmented Art. Bottle Boards. Fireworks Fail.

Around the Web: Paper Press. Tricky Typography. Excellent Electrode. Problematic Poultry. Silk Sensors. Augmented Art. Bottle Boards. Fireworks Fail.
whattheythink.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from whattheythink.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New York , United States , New Hampshire , United Kingdom , White House , District Of Columbia , Czech Republic , Museum Of Modern Art , City Of , Soult Ukpyolsi , South Korea , Baden Wüberg , Eteläuomen Läi , Lake Constance , Clement Clarke Moore , Bill Watterson , William Shakespeare , Harlan Ellison , Walt Whitman , Vladimir Nabokov , Mark Hamill Hamillhimself , Little Prince , Mervyn Peake , Steve Wozniak , Rube Goldberg , Martin Demaine ,

Fonts as puzzles: Can you solve them?


Fonts as puzzles: Can you solve them?
A font created by Erik and Martin Demaine. The Demaines, a father-and-son team of “algorithmic typographers,” have confected an entire suite of mathematically inspired typefaces. Erik Demaine, Martin Demaine and Katie Steckles via The New York Times.
by Siobhan Roberts
(NYT NEWS SERVICE)
.- The verb “puzzle” — to perplex or confuse, bewilder or bemuse — is of unknown origin. “That kind of fits,” said Martin Demaine, an artist-in-residence at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “It’s a puzzle where the word ‘puzzle’ comes from.”
His son, Erik Demaine, an MIT computer scientist, agreed. “It’s a self-describing etymology,” he said. ....

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Artdaily - The First Art Newspaper on the Net


The First Art Newspaper on the Net
 
A visitor studies Titian’s portrait, “Benedetto Varchi,” left, and Bronzino’s “Allegorical portrait of Dante,” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s “The Medici: Portraits and Politics, 1512-1570,” exhibit in New York, June 21, 2021. The sweep of Italian history and art history in dazzling portraits from the dynasty’s final hurrah, on view in a sumptuous exhibition at the Met. Diana Markosian/The New York Times.
by Roberta Smith
(NYT NEWS SERVICE)
.- It’s hard to imagine Florence, cradle of the High Renaissance of early modern Europe, without its avaricious, venal, culture-conscious first family, the Medicis. Crowned and uncrowned, during periods of supposedly republican government and not, they largely ruled the city-state, or connived to, from the mid-14th to the mid-18th centuries, using art to cement their power. They excelled at banking and prospered especially when their Rome branch quietly became banker to ....

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How to read a 300-year-old letter without opening it


Updated:
The team used a technique called X-ray microtomography
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Computer-generated unfolding sequence of sealed letter DB-1538. Courtesy of the Unlocking History Research Group archive. The letters are from the Brienne Collection, Sound and Vision The Hague, The Netherlands.
 
The team used a technique called X-ray microtomography
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In 1926, a seventeenth-century trunk containing over 2000 unclaimed letters was bequeathed to the Dutch postal museum. The letters were closed using an ancient technique called letterlocking, in which the writing paper is intricately folded and secured to become its own envelopes. Now an international team of researchers has virtually unfolded and unlocked the contents of one of the letters and the findings were published on Tuesday in ....

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