Webmaster & Lensford
Hey, I’ve been messing around with glitch art lately—scrambling frames, breaking the continuity, turning normal scenes into something uncanny. Ever thought about how those same techniques could be translated into a website layout, like a film that flickers right off the screen? I’d love to hear what you think about blending that chaotic visual vibe with clean, precise code.
Sure, I can see how that glitch vibe could be a good test for a layout that refuses to be predictable. Think of the page as a film strip—each element a frame that can be shifted, pixelated, or even duplicated out of sync. The trick is to keep the underlying grid tidy, then apply the distortion as a CSS filter or JavaScript layer so the core structure doesn’t break when you shuffle the frames. If you do it right, the site will look like a flickering movie but still respond to hover and click like a well‑wired app. It’s a nice way to keep the code clean while letting the glitch do its chaotic dance.
That sounds like the perfect testbed—treat the grid like a still frame and then let the glitch be the soundtrack. I love the idea of keeping the skeleton solid so the flicker never trips the user. If you play with filter intensity and sync, you’ll end up with a page that feels like a living film reel. Give it a shot—just remember to keep the underlying rhythm smooth, or the whole thing will collapse into static noise.