This is a stop motion video created by Instagram user rudy_willingham, who used 170 laser-cut leaves to perform Earth, Wind & Fire’s ‘September’. Do I remember the 21st night of September? Of course not, I can’t even remember last night. If it was anything like the nights I can remember
Because you don’t know until you try (although you probably already had a pretty good idea), this is a video of maker of things (including poor choices) Allen Pan attempting to build a lawn mower that cuts grass with the power of burning lasers. Apparently Allen was inspired by California’s
These are two TikTok videos of artist Tee Ken Ng making cool patterns on a glow-in-the-dark vinyl record with a laser pointer as the record spins on a turntable. That’s neat. Now I want a want a glow-in-the-dark record. And a laser pointer. But nooooooo, my mom took mine away
These are a couple clips from Vietnamese performance artist Lại Trần Ninh Kiềm (aka Killusion), featuring a dance routine choreographed with a laser show. It was like real lightsabers they were swinging! Also, just for the record, if I was a laser dance performer, there is absolutely no chance I
Seen here looking like the radioactive waste produced by my roommate, this is a short video utilizing a green laser to visualize the atomized plume caused by a toilet being flushed. I don’t want that sparkle bomb touching my butt! So, what’s the lesson here — stand up and close
Using a “hard to acquire” laser diode (I suspect the black market was heavily involved), Youtuber styropyro went and built what is allegedly the world’s brightest laser pointer. Based on that photo alone, I’m apt to believe him. The green laser is so bright “you need welder’s goggles to be
These are a couple Instagram videos of Flare Fabrications using a powerful burning laser to clean the grime off of a penny and dime, leaving a Mike Tyson style face tattoo on George Washing in the process, and cool guy shades on Roosevelt. Now I want one of those lasers.
This is ‘Lost In Motions,’ a fun stop motion video created by Argentinian filmmaker Fernando Livschitz using 800 individually laser-cut dancer silhouettes. Perhaps just as cool as the finished product though is the behind-the-scenes footage that plays after the short, showing how the entire thing came together. Still, going with