Vulcan #24
Today’s image didn’t come from a formula in the way the recent pattern posts did. If there’s math inside it, it’s buried under many layers of decisions. The real work happened in the process — choosing a tool, applying it, seeing what changed, and deciding what to try next.
The program I wrote has a library of tools that each manipulate pixels in a specific way. Some distort, some blend, some shift values around. None of them create a finished image on their own. They’re more like brushes or knives in a physical studio: you pick one up, make a pass across the canvas, and see whether the piece moves in the right direction.
For this artwork, I started with a simple base and then applied tools one at a time. Each pass altered the image in a way I couldn’t fully predict, so the piece grew through iteration — adjust, evaluate, repeat. The math behind the tools is real, but it isn’t the point here. What matters is the sequence of choices that shaped the final result.
Today’s work is a variation of Vulcan #1. I started from the same base, tilted the background away from the viewer, and added a fade‑to‑black. The steps I used to build that first piece — plus the extra passes that led to this one — are all reflected in the process I described above.
It’s worth saying, quietly, that this isn’t AI‑generated. The computer executes the transformations, but the decisions — which tool to use, when to stop, what “finished” looks like — are mine. The creative work lives in that sequence of choices, not in the machinery underneath.
Vulcan #25
For this part of the Vulcan series, I set a boundary for myself: one layer, flat colors, and a repeating pattern that moves like a quiet rhythm under the surface. Within that boundary I’m testing its strength — how far it can be stretched, where it warps, how it responds to pressure. These pieces are the early hammer‑strikes in Vulcan’s workshop, learning the metal before shaping it into something more elaborate.
Vulcan #26
The math here wanders into territory I can’t describe without putting us both to sleep, so I’m giving the words a rest. If you want me to take a swing at explaining it, you can always email me — but for now, the images get the spotlight.