In one of the most impressive advertising ideas I have ever seen, Singapore-based art director and designer Chan Hwee Chong uses a single long line to create spiral recreations of famous artworks.
In an inspired advertising campaign for Faber-Castell, designer Chan Hwee Chong demonstrates his unbelievable talent by creating spiral illustrations inspired by some of the most popular masterpieces in history. Using the above mentioned company’s pens, he starts with a blank canvas, and by drawing a continuous line in a spiral he somehow manages to make detailed reproductions of the famous works of art. The level of precision and control in Chong’s creations is simply amazing, and although I watched a short video of him in action, I’m still not sure how he manages to achieve such detailed reproductions with a single line.






via Neatorama


















Wow, those are really amazing.
You can make wallpaper with these pictures.
WTF?!?! …in a mystified and flabbergasted kind of a way…
nice… check julian teran website!
Fake. it has something under the page, the proportions are too correct. Or his/she is a robot and has a scanner incorporated.
I’m thinking that they project an image onto it in a limited wavelength, then filter that wavelength out of the video camera. Not too hard to do. The video does seem a little desaturated in the red wavelength, but they could just as easily be using a purple on the edge of ultraviolet.