Flip/Flop: Goodbye 2022 – Welcome 2023

by | Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Since 2008 our family has been creating short videos to celebrate the end of one year and the beginning of another. Our videos are always typographical in nature with some kind of an AHA! moment or optical illusion built in. This year’s video is no different. Check it out (full screen is best)…



Some context…

Back in 2008, one winter day in Michigan, when it was too cold to go out, we decided to make a video, more to keep ourselves occupied than anything else. And then we made another one the next year, and then the year after that and the year after that… and here we are, in 2022 – with our 16th offering. (And just if you are keeping track, and suspect we got our math wrong, we made two videos in our first year). Along they way we have experimented with and explored a wide variety of optical illusions and visual tricks. Our production values are not very high, and (to be fair) neither is our budget. That said, it has been great fun, and a somewhat unique and wonderful family tradition.

You can see all the previous years’ videos here. They ARE fun to watch (and educational as well).

Credits

The core idea behind this particular video comes from an ambigram design created by Szymon Golis, in which he noticed an intriguing visual relationship between the numbers 2 and 3. Our video builds on this idea and, adding animation and music. (More about ambigrams below).

The images were created in Adobe Illustrator, and then imported into Keynote to be animated. Final editing to music was done in Adobe Premiere Pro. The background music, titled Super Friendly, is composed by the amazing Kevin MacLeod who makes so much of his work available royalty-free. We have used his compositions for multiple new-year’s videos over the years. He is an internet treasure!

And last but definitely not the least, the photograph towards the end was taken by the talented Tanvi Dev.

How this works?

Syzmon Gollis’ great insight was to notice that hiding parts of the number 3, if done the right way could be read as the number 2, when rotated by 180-degrees (and vice versa). Essentially when faced with a “gap” our mind “fills” it in a way that makes sense. Thus our minds use the broader context to force meaning into what is essentially an ambiguous shape – constructing a 3 in one case and a 2 in another. The animations below explain how this works, showing the two possible ways our minds can “fill in” the gap.

Animation 1
Animation 2

Digging deeper into ambigrams

This technique or writing words in such a manner that they can be “read” in more than one way is not new. Such calligraphic designs, that have more than one interpretation, are called ambigrams (a word coined by cognitive scientist Douglas R. Hofstadter).

In keeping with the title of this year’s video – here is an ambigram for the words “Flip” and “Flop” where your reading (hopefully) flips and flops between flip and flop!

Flip/Flop ambigram

You can learn more about ambigrams (and the underlying mathematical ideas behind these designs) here or by watching the video below.

A few randomly selected blog posts…

Stuff Indian’s Like

After the success of Stuff white people like, can Stuff Indians like be far behind. Check it out... it has the occasional nugget that nails Indians and their behavior.

TPACK newsletter #37, June 2018

TPACK newsletter #37, June 2018

The latest version of the TPACK newsletter (TPACKNewsletterIssue37) is now available and can be  found here (pdf). All previous issues are archived here. This issue is 60 pages long!!! The amount of work being done in this area never ceases to...

Improv here, there, everywhere…

A few months ago I wrote about Professor R. K. Joshi (here and here). He was, as I said in the piece, maybe the single greatest influence on my role as a teacher. I had mentioned that R.K. loved absurdity and play. I was reminded of this when I read about this group...

A defining moment!

Barack Obama is the democratic nominee for the president of the United States!!! Five months ago, after he had won the Iowa caucuses I had blogged his acceptance speech video (see it here) and had asked a question, "Is this a defining moment of our time?" Today I am...

Announcing the Numeroscriptor, great quote

What a wonderful quote... Already every bank of any importance probably uses calculating machines. It is not likely that the fatiguing and uncertain process of having arithmetical calculations of any sort performed in the brains of clerks will survive the improvements...

Speaking of leadership

Matt and I were invited to Sydney, Australia a year ago as a part of the Teaching Teachers for the Future (TTF) project. You can see a report in the New Educator: TPACK takes hold in Australia. As a part of this visit we were interviewed to speak a bit about...

Modeling human behavior: The new dark art of silicon sampling

Modeling human behavior: The new dark art of silicon sampling

A couple of months ago I had written this post, On merging with our technologies – which was essentially quotes from a conversation Ezra Klein had with the novelist Mohsin Hamid. I finished the post with a quote speaking the dangers of predictive technologies on human...

TPACK in a textbook!

Just found out from Kathryn Dirkin that a prominent textbook of Educational Technology now features the TPACK framework. The book is titled "Integrating Educational Technology into Teaching" [link to Amazon.com] and is authored by Margaret D. Roblyer and Aaron H...

Happy 2016, New Video

Since 2009, our family has been creating videos to welcome the new year. The videos are typically typographical in nature, sometimes including a visual illusion or some kind or the other. So as usual, we have a video for welcome 2016. Shot on our dining...

1 Comment

  1. Durga Reddy Mekapotula

    Great creations…….

    Need so much creativity…….

    And Mathematics……..

    Your works are very curious to our children and generates new thoughts in them……

    Thanking you

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *