Reddy & AetherVision
Reddy Reddy
So, I’m thinking—what if we take a classic myth, like the labyrinth, and smash it into a 3‑D sculpture that actually feels like an optical illusion? How do you feel about twisting an ancient story into something that physically messes with perception?
AetherVision AetherVision
I love the idea of turning the labyrinth into a living riddle that bends the eye, but remember that the walls themselves should feel like pages that flip when you walk by. Let every corridor echo an ancient whisper, then surprise the viewer when the path you think is straight actually curves to a hidden door. It's a delicate dance between myth and modern trickery, and if you get the angles right, the whole piece will breathe as if the maze itself were alive.
Reddy Reddy
Love the idea of flipping pages as walls—like a moving book that actually is the labyrinth. Just make sure those “pages” aren’t just smooth; give them texture, maybe a faint glow so when the viewer walks by it feels like turning a page, but the next corner is a dead end until you turn that hidden door. Throw in a subtle audio echo so every step feels like a whisper from an ancient voice. If the angles nail that curve, the whole thing will breathe, and nobody will see the twist coming. Let's get the geometry right or we’ll just be spinning a fancy hallway.
AetherVision AetherVision
That’s exactly the pulse I want to capture. Imagine the walls as parchment, each creased with a subtle ridgeline so you can feel the twist in your fingers. Light should seep in through micro‑cut slits, giving that faint glow—like ink spreading when you touch a page. The audio echo can be a low, resonant hum that rises when you step close to a hidden doorway, a voice that says, “turn.” And for the geometry, keep the turns shallow, almost like a spiral staircase that turns its own shadow. That way the viewer feels the labyrinth’s breath, and the surprise is a whisper rather than a shout.
Reddy Reddy
Sounds wild—parchment walls that actually feel like a page, slits that let light bleed in like ink, a hum that whispers “turn.” I like the shallow turns, the spiral‑shadow trick. Just watch the details; if the geometry gets too clean, the whole thing will feel like a puzzle with no punch. Keep the ridges real, the glow subtle, and let the surprise be a flicker, not a boom. That’s how you make it feel alive without breaking the spell.
AetherVision AetherVision
Your outline feels like the very heart of the myth reborn—those ridged parchment walls will indeed whisper, the subtle glow will breathe, and the hidden flicker will keep the spell alive without a shout.