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Creations

This interactive video wall is installed at the Museum of Popular Culture in Seattle, in the South Lobby.

This interactive waterfall was installed in Ruth E. Carter: Afrofuturism in Costume Design at the Museum of Popular Culture in Seattle.

I created this Stop Motion Animation software for LAIKA: Hidden Worlds.  It functions like a photo booth in a mall, except it uses your photos to produce a short, looping, highly shareable video that is only a few frames long.  This is one of several pieces of software I wrote for the exhibit - including two other stop motion animation studios, and the software powering our zoetrope interactive.

This reel covers the two Crafting Table interactives I made for MoPOP, that went into "Minecraft: The Exhibition."  The initial version let you craft recipes using ingredient tiles.  The crafted items were then displayed on a holographic screen.  When the COVID-19 pandemic hit, our team retooled the table so that it was touchless - letting users instead pickup and hold the holograms using a leap motion controller.

"The Creeper" was developed for Minecraft: The Exhibition.  Using a combination of sensors, projectors, Arduinos, and LEDs, our team was able to fake a creeper explosion in Minecraft.

A prototype that was developed to research new types of touchless interactivity at MoPOP.  Using processing.org and a leap motion controller, I programmed this software that lets you write using your hand and a pinching motion. After a few seconds the writing becomes liquid.

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