Current Gallery: fractals ( piece)
FRACTALS I am hoping you are enjoying my fractals that just come randomly as so…they are mean’t for you and your journey…It amazes me how they come with so much love, need, joy for your heart. Enjoy… It was stated to me at one time that fractals work with each person’s energy where your fractals become your own. My fractals are all before any post processing. I am a beginner at fractals and learning more as time goes by and possibly in the future taking courses in graphics to help me along. But, I am liking the fractals in the raw state they appear. As I create fractals, I select them through intuition. I will be posting them as a single image or as a group depending on what comes to me at the time they appear. What is a fractal? From the Fractal FAQ: “There are many mathematical structures that are fractals; e.g. Sierpinski triangle, Koch snowflake, Peano curve, Mandelbrot set, and Lorenz attractor. Fractals also describe many real-world objects, such as clouds, mountains, turbulence, and coastlines, that do not correspond to simple geometric shapes.” The Fractal FAQ was created and edited by Ken Shirriff through September 26, 1994. The current editor is Ermel Stepp.
FRACTALS I am hoping you are enjoying my fractals that just come randomly as so…they are mean’t for you and your journey…It amazes me how they come with so much love, need, joy for your heart. Enjoy… It was stated to me at one time that fractals work with each person’s energy where your fractals become your own. My fractals are all before any post processing. I am a beginner at fractals and learning more as time goes by and possibly in the future taking courses in graphics to help me along. But, I am liking the fractals in the raw state they appear. As I create fractals, I select them through intuition. I will be posting them as a single image or as a group depending on what comes to me at the time they appear. What is a fractal? From the Fractal FAQ: “There are many mathematical structures that are fractals; e.g. Sierpinski triangle, Koch snowflake, Peano curve, Mandelbrot set, and Lorenz attractor. Fractals also describe many real-world objects, such as clouds, mountains, turbulence, and coastlines, that do not correspond to simple geometric shapes.” The Fractal FAQ was created and edited by Ken Shirriff through September 26, 1994. The current editor is Ermel Stepp.