Transparent vases create an optical illusion of colors stretching into nothingness

It is probably too easy to take vases for granted since they’re meant to hold the flowers that are supposed to grab your attention. Of course, the right combination of a beautiful flower arrangement and an equally eye-catching vase can have a stronger impact than just one or the other. And when it comes to being eye-catching, there is probably nothing better than an invisible vase, or at least one that seems to disappear and reappear out of thin air. Thanks to the seemingly magical play of colors, materials, and shapes, this vase collection takes center stage by deceiving your brains into thinking that parts of its form have stretched so far to the point of disappearing completely.

Designer: Bo Zhang

Pliable materials have the tendency to grow thinner the more you stretch them, as one can easily see with rubber, clay, or dough. As these stretched sections become thinner, they also have a tendency to become paler, presuming they have some distinct color, to begin with. In the real world, these stretched objects will break at some point, but fantasy might make us think that these parts can instead become invisible and disappear.

This is exactly the kind of fantasy illusion that the Stretch Color vase collection generates in our minds. The mysterious shapes of these crystalline vases are meant to reflect its designer’s “obsession with the color of the reconstruction space,” and its illusion works on multiple levels beyond its disappearing act. Depending on the angle you’re viewing it, the vase could sometimes look like a 2D planar art painting or sometimes a 3D sculptural artwork. It’s almost as if the vases were designed to confound the mind with both their beauty as well as their conflicting visual signals.

The vases come in three forms, two of which seem to bend and stretch near the middle but have full color at both ends. Perhaps the most visually perplexing member of the trio is the vase whose form ends where its color disappears, strengthening the illusion of stretching to the point of becoming nothing. The vases are, in a way, also testaments to sophisticated manufacturing processes considering how they also defy conventional shapes and color patterns.

Of course, with vases like these, it’s almost a shame to have them filled with flowers that take the attention away from their mesmerizing forms. They do force a sense of minimalism by making you pick simpler flowers and arrangements that truly bring out the vase’s beauty, not to mention further trick your mind into wondering how the flowers or parts of the vase manage to stay afloat despite the missing parts.

The post Transparent vases create an optical illusion of colors stretching into nothingness first appeared on Yanko Design.

These Samsung TV Ambient-Mode themes are blowing our minds!

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Earlier this year, Samsung revealed their line of QLED TVs, but what was more interesting was a feature that relied on the QLED’s accurate color representation and an algorithm that literally made your Samsung TV disappear into the wall behind it. Aptly referred to as Samsung’s Ambient Mode, this feature allowed the TV to go from being a big black square when switched off, to a subtle, elegant frame that was barely visible. The algorithm created by Samsung could exactly generate an image of the wall behind it, creating a believable illusion that the TV could practically ‘disappear’ when not in use. The Ambient mode featured a gallery of themes to choose from, allowing the screen to display floating weather updates and even scenery that complimented the space around it. Partnering with Dezeen, Samsung launched its Ambient Mode Design Competition to crowdsource a few more themes. Here are a few that blew us away!

These themes all capitalize on the QLED technology that allows for near-accurate color representation. The designs create illusions of floating objects and extended spaces, giving your smart television much more than the ability to be a screen that plays back TV shows and movies. Some of the Ambient Mode themes turn the television into a painting, some into art pieces that give notifications or tell the time, while others transform the screen into a whiteboard of sorts. Some even allow the TV to behave like a mirror or a window into an imaginary room, showcasing how far televisions and displays have come in the past few years! The entries for the Dezeen x Samsung TV Ambient Mode Design Competition will be on display at IFA 2018 in Berlin.

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Designs Courtesy: Dezeen x Samsung TV Ambient Mode Design Competition

Samsung’s new TV uses algorithms to turn invisible!

Samsung’s been all about making the television pretty both when switched on as well as off. 2016’s Serif TV may have kickstarted the movement, and I’ve been pretty vocal about how much I hated it (a subjective opinion), but what Samsung does now, two years later, is nothing short of remarkable. Its latest series of QLED TVs come with what’s known as an ambient mode, that through the power of image capturing and incredible algorithms, turns the TV invisible, barring the beautiful thin bezel that you barely notice!

The Samsung TV’s Ambient mode is pretty marvelous since it does a rather believable job of making your television seem like glass. Relying on the QLEDs to produce near-real-life color reproduction, the TV can replicate the color of the wall behind, and it even comes with a weather indicator and clock that seem to float off the surface of the wall (cleverly even applying a calculated drop shadow effect on the visuals as well as the TV’s bezel, taking into account the tv’s thickness). What you’re left with is a TV that literally looks like a black-bordered piece of glass. Have a patterned/textured wall behind your TV? Never mind! Samsung’s Smart Things app allows you to click a picture of your television and its background with your phone and the television’s AI runs algorithms to generate a map that calculates AND aligns the pattern behind the TV. It’s just magical how the TV’s colors and even brightness match real-life to make it seem like the screen you’re looking at isn’t a cluster of pixels, but a transparent material. You’ve got the option to choose between weather and time displays, a seemingly transparent landscape painting, and the option to display your photos as a collage of wall-mounted pictures. The results in the video look incredible for sure, and that algorithm is nothing short of magical. I especially love the designers’ attention to detail by adding shadows behind the bezel too, uplifting the experience and completing the illusion. I’ll be waiting to see the TV for myself though, although on the basis of the images I have to say it’s miles ahead of that hideous Serif-esque monstrosity they called a television!

Designer: Samsung

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Recommended Reading: The bright future of free over-the-air TV

Free Over-the-Air TV Is Going to Get Better James K. Willcox, Consumer Reports Thanks to a new standard known as ATSC 3.0, over-the-air TV broadcasts will include all the newfangled tech like 4K and HDR. Consumer Reports has the run down on what t...