Wednesday, 30 July 2014

Note the surprisingly spooky blood red paper-making process

Watch the Surprisingly Creepy Process of Making Blood Red Paper

You have your remote cabins in the forest; its rare laboratories; its Bodegas Sierra; But the best setting for a horror movie could just be a document of 130 years of the factory in London. This short video shows a shader, moody about how G. F. Smith produces leaves in a single tone in its line of Colorplan. Never wear bright red the same again.

It is a novel about the genre of the industrial process, which usually shows machines efficient and reliable to work his magic in a simple way hard illuminated that leaves little to the imagination (Hello, ramen!). These clips often serve to demystify is put together product and what happens until it arrives fully formed on a shelf.

Watch the Surprisingly Creepy Process of Making Blood Red Paper

Here, however, Ben Stevenson and fact intended create something really creepy, but no less great to see it. The combo score rare and screeching and the noise of the equipment is made by a chilling soundtrack, and once you begin the dye pour in white pulp things get super dark and suggestive, super fast. (Spoiler alert: it seems a lot like blood.) [It is a pleasure to]


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