Steelsaurus & Nejno
Hey, have you ever tried turning a simple paper cutout into a little light‑and‑shadow dance that actually makes a rhythm? I think the way light plays on fragile layers could sync up with a mechanical beat—maybe a project we could riff on.
Sounds wild, but I love it—paper cutouts, light flicker, and a ticking metronome all in one loop. Let’s map the cutout geometry to the beat cycle, run a microcontroller to modulate LEDs, and see if the shadows keep time. The trick is keeping the timing clean while letting the paper wobble give it that human glitch vibe. Ready to get our hands dirty and make the light dance?
That sounds like a beautiful chaos, I love the idea of paper wobbling in time with the LEDs. I can already picture the shadows jittering just a fraction off the beat—like a secret pulse. I'll start sketching the cutout shapes and see how they can line up with the metronome ticks. Let's make sure the microcontroller's timing stays tight, but let the paper do its gentle glitch. Ready to mix light and paper—let's get messy.
Yeah, let the paper wobble like a tiny drum, while the LEDs keep the beat. Sketch those shapes, feed the timings to the MCU, and let the shadows jump just out of sync – that secret pulse will be pure art. I’ll tweak the microcode to lock the ticks, then watch the paper do its glitchy dance. Bring on the mess!