DrNosferatu a day ago

Not exactly circles, but famously:

With four parameters I can fit an elephant, and with five I can make him wiggle his trunk.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Von_Neumann%27s_elephant

  • KolibriFly 11 hours ago

    Feels like the mathematical version of "just because you can doesn't mean you should."

  • kbelder 19 hours ago

    "and with 20 billion I can make it hold a conversation."

    • NitpickLawyer 11 hours ago

      To paraphrase that quote about hydrogen: Give gradient descent a few billion parameters, and it starts wondering where it came from and what does it all mean.

  • rob74 8 hours ago

    Looks more like an amoeba to me...

ezekg 20 hours ago

It's really satisfying to create logomarks solely out of circles, idk why. A challenge, I guess.

I did a few back in my day as a designer:

1. https://dribbble.com/shots/1909369-Liberty-Eagle-Arms

2. https://dribbble.com/shots/1553151-Flint-mark-icons

That first one is some of my best work.

  • tuyiown 9 hours ago

    Constraints forces creativity. Some well chosen constraints are aesthetics rules that helps you land pleasing results. Poetry has a long history on that matter.

    Another example of constrained creativity is early to mid nineties electronic music.

  • KolibriFly 11 hours ago

    There's something oddly meditative about designing within strict constraints like circles

  • jaredhallen 16 hours ago

    Yeah, those are all really nice. Good work.

rob74 8 hours ago

> Inspired by the Twitter logo, which is made from 13 perfect circles

Compared to that, the new logo doesn't have a circle (segment) anywhere to be seen (unless you consider straight lines as circle segments with the center located at infinity of course), and is simply the "mathematical double-struck capital X" from an unknown but probably pre-existing font (apparently Monotype's "Special Alphabets 4" comes close, but isn't identical, according to https://tweethunter.io/blog/how-to-write-twitter-x-iphone-ma...).

sverhagen a day ago

It feels like I'm looking at the next so many Ubuntu backgrounds!

nonethewiser a day ago

Im curious what the process looks like to implement this. It seems like it would be easiest to start with the animal using only perfectly(?) curved lines and then complete them into circles after the fact. Although that seems kind of pointless and I imagine they start with circles. And I guess it would hard to have a curve from a perfect circle without the circle?

I just have a hard time imagining you start with circles, lay them down (resize as needed) and continue. I mean I guess that doesnt sound so crazy after I say it... it just seems like it would add a lot of extra noise to the image that would make it much harder to draw.

  • tarentel a day ago

    I can't speak to this but I took a drawing class a long time ago. I'm not very good but it was a lot of drawing circles. When you see people freehand stuff it's kind of wild but that's not how people learn how to draw they're just very good at it from practice. Most of learning is drawing very basic shapes, usually circles, and erasing parts that don't make sense and continuing.

    • jihadjihad 21 hours ago

      > drawing very basic shapes, usually circles, and erasing parts that don't make sense

      There's a hilarious Spongebob bit [0] where Squidward is teaching an art class, and he starts off in that exact manner of trying to draw a perfect circle, only to have Spongebob subvert the entire idea. The whole episode is artistic gold IMO.

      0: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTlpFEvmxdM

    • tmountain a day ago

      I have been practicing art a lot lately. You can draw just about anything using spheres, cubes, cylinders, and cones. You start off with the 2d versions.

      • tarentel 21 hours ago

        I stopped after a few classes but I was amazed at how good I got in a short amount of time after learning how to break stuff down which isn't something I really thought about before. By all metrics I'm still a pretty terrible drawer but prior to that stick figures would have been challenging.

        • floxy 20 hours ago

          Another good resource for learning how to draw realistically is the book: "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain". The premise is that your brain wants to take shortcuts and group/chunk things together on what they should look like, instead of what things actually look like. But even a rectangle in real life has non-right-angles because of perspective, etc.. And if you draw what you actually see, then the drawings come out correct. Some of the exercises are copying other drawings placed upside-down, so that you brain doesn't try to over-interpret things. I can't recommend this enough if you want to go from a beginner to something respectable in drawing abilities.

          https://www.amazon.com/Drawing-Right-Side-Brain-Definitive/d...

          https://kk.org/cooltools/drawing-on-the-right-side-of-the-br...

          • tmountain 19 hours ago

            I read the book and loved it (about 15 years ago). There’s no royal road to becoming an artist but lots of joy along the way. Whatever the path, enjoy it!

        • kunzhi 21 hours ago

          Drawing from circles, squares, triangles, etc. in art is called "construction" and is definitely a foundational technique. It really is amazing how much easier drawing becomes once it's understood (and practiced).

    • barrenko 10 hours ago

      True, I did some amateur vector art (in Illustrator) and you basically have to compose objects out of basic shapes. It is truly highly meditative.

  • adamanonymous a day ago

    There are some photos of sketches at the bottom of the page. Looks like they started with curves and turned them into circles later

    • nonethewiser a day ago

      I suppose the thing the circle is really informing is the "perfectness" of the curve. You cant just draw in curves and extend it to a circle (wont be perfect). I guess Im not sure how you get "perfect" curves.

      I suspect its a stencil or something. So in some sense the circle does exist first, even if they only draw the curve from it initially (before marking it up with the full circle after the fact).

      • PebblesRox a day ago

        If I were trying to do something like this I would sketch it out first with imperfect curves and then worry about making it perfect once I was at the computer. It would look slightly different but I don’t think it would make that much of an impact in the initial design process.

  • KolibriFly 10 hours ago

    What's wild is how much clarity and personality you can get from that process. Instead of adding noise, it forces simplification, which actually helps with visual clarity

iamwil a day ago

I remember some post that I can find now, that demonstrated the twitter bird logo is also made from circles. All I can find is this reddit post now.

https://www.reddit.com/r/interestingasfuck/comments/txdimd/t...

enqk 3 hours ago

Japanese family crests (Mon: 紋) are almost entirely made of circles (and lines, but that's rarer)

Often depicting slices of vegetables, animals..

From few circles to hundreds

abeppu a day ago

See also work from Schmidhuber in the mid/late 1990s https://people.idsia.ch/~juergen/locoart/node12.html

  • srean a day ago

    He was done a great deal of injustice when he was passed over for the Turing award that was given to Hinton, Bengio, LeCun.

    Then there is this from his blog --

    Dec 2024: Sadly, the Nobel Prize in Physics 2024 for Hopfield & Hinton is a Nobel Prize for plagiarism. They republished methodologies developed in Ukraine and Japan by Ivakhnenko and Amari in the 1960s & 1970s, as well as other techniques, without citing the original papers. Even in later surveys, they didn't credit the original inventors (thus turning what may have been unintentional plagiarism into a deliberate form). None of the important algorithms for modern Artificial Intelligence were created by Hopfield & Hinton. Details in the recent technical report, with lots of references, links, and facts.

    https://people.idsia.ch/~juergen/physics-nobel-2024-plagiari...

    • moralestapia 20 hours ago

      Agree.

      Also, AlphaFold is great but hardly an innovation. David Baker deserved it 100%.

  • moconnor a day ago

    I thought this was a joke, but he actually did do this first. Impressive!

fracus 20 hours ago

Art with restrictions can be more interesting than without.

  • yesthisiswes 16 hours ago

    This is so true. I took a figure drawing class in college and we were instructed to draw with a cloth and charcoal dust. Easily some of the best work I made came out of that restriction.

  • PlunderBunny 19 hours ago

    Architecture too. The worst building come from architects given a blank page to start with. Constraints, and sympathy for the surrounding built environment produce great work.

saunved_42 11 hours ago

I really love the way these look. I'm imagining a short film with these characters, and it'd be a nice experiment to see how it turns out.

kleiba 6 hours ago

Not circles, but arcs.

  • hmwhy 6 hours ago

    If you pay closer attention, you can see that some of the designs rely on very deliberate placements of circles; for example, eyes of the monkey and owl, and the nose of the whale.

    Those are just the obvious ones that I can immediately spot — there was probably a lot of careful consideration into the placement of circles in order to facilitate good looking arcs and circles that bring the animals to "life".

    • kleiba 4 hours ago

      Sure, you're not wrong. But a circle is just an arc of length 2pi * radius.

noduerme 8 hours ago

This page feels like an AI traveled back in time and (faked) the date.

[edit] Nevermind. I'm being too harsh. The creator was obviously having fun and being creative. That's cool. I think if nothing else this just proves how jaded and skeptical about clever artwork I've become in the past few years.

gcanyon 13 hours ago

It bugs me than e.g. the owl's ears benefit from a dramatic change in color that isn't related to anything outlined by the circles.

ge96 21 hours ago

I miss being creative, before I knew how to make front end UIs I had crazy ideas but then became grounded. This one isn't super crazy but I like those vertical buildings.

Tangent, with a dark/colorful theme in an editor the minimap looks like a city scape

KolibriFly 11 hours ago

Reminds me of how some of the best ideas come out of working within restrictions, not in spite of them

__s a day ago

Curious how well transforms on circles could be composed to animate these animals

glxxyz a day ago

I never really liked Twitter but I feel oddly nostalgic for the logo now.

tzury a day ago

2016…

This type of content is becoming rarer on the internet nowadays.

  • KiranRao0 a day ago

    I don’t think less of this type of content exists. Its just harder to find when inundated with all other slop on the internet.

    • ryandrake a day ago

      Just doing a Google search for "animals made from circles", you get the usual header full of "Images" and "Videos" crap, then in the actual results links, you have the usual Pinterest linkslop, Facebook linkslop, Reddit linkslop, a bunch of articles written by the designer (now we're getting somewhere). OP's link is finally on page 4 of the search results.

      • dwringer a day ago

        For me, searching "animals made from circles", your comment put this HN thread as the #1 result while the #2 result was a syndicated article about the linked post. When I get more specific and search "animals drawn only from circles" it turns up the linked post as the first result. But my results may be more specific partly because I don't use ad blockers.

    • netghost a day ago

      Or we just don't look past twitter and such.

barbazoo a day ago

Could this be the next captcha challenge? "Draw an animal out of 13 circles to prove you are human".

  • CamperBob2 a day ago

    I was thinking that this would be low-hanging fruit for a model. The parameter space is so tiny compared to what a diffusion model already has to deal with...

curiousObject a day ago

Interesting.

What animals cannot be accurately depicted with 13 circles?

  • bsza a day ago

    You can depict any animal swallowed by a pufferfish with 1 circle.

    • jessekv 21 hours ago

      What is essential is invisible to the eye.

  • Y_Y 3 hours ago

    Corals?

  • trieloff a day ago

    Pelican on a bicycle

    • addaon a day ago

      More generally, any animal that cannot be drawn in 12 circles cannot be drawn in 13 circles when riding a bicycle. By recursion, no animal can be drawn when riding a stack of seven bicycles.

  • mixedbit a day ago

    centipede

    • globnomulous 4 hours ago

      I was going to suggest "octopus" but your answer is better.

    • curiousObject a day ago

      I think so. With 13 circles, I can’t figure out how you could represent more than 26 legs (and other features would be lost).

      • InitialLastName a day ago

        You can use perspective tricks to only show half the legs

        A mature house centipede has 15 pairs of legs. You can probably get the point across with a portion of that, and use two parts of a circle for 2 legs.

ksajh a day ago

class Animal {

Circle circles_[13];

}

  • gnramires a day ago

    You also need to encode the painted areas somehow. They are not only intersections on K shapes, but sometimes exclusions as well (like (A^B)/C). Two ways come to mind:

    (1) Listing closed curves by vertices. Each vertex of a painted area is an intersection of two or more circles, and delimits a section of a circle. So the section of circles that enclose a circle can be encoded each by the union of:

    (1.1) A circle (index); (1.2) A 2nd circle (index) that intersects the 1st on a first point; (1.3) A bit identifying the (first) intersection (because there may be 2 possible); (1.4) A 3rd circle (index) that intersects the 1st on a second point; (1.5) A bit identifying the (second) intersection.

    Note the base circle would be the first intersection of a subsequent section of this closed curve, and the 3rd circle would be the subsequent base circle. So 1/2/3 won't be necessary for subsequent curves. So only (K+2) indices + (K+1) bits are necessary for this encoding.

    Total ~K log2(K)+K bits. I hypothesize (left to the reader :)) a closed curve should contain at most 2x13 points. There can be at most 2^13 distinct regions however, so each figure (Animal) can be encoded with less than that many curves per figure. So each figure (Animal) can be encoded with less than 2^13 x 26x(5+1) bits =~ 1.3Mbit.

    But that's mostly pathological cases, if each Animal must be a fully connected area, then that might reduce (hypothesis above) to at most only 26x(5+1) bits = 156 bits, or 20 bytes!

    I left out a problem which area shapes encoded within each other (like eyes). In that case you need at most another 156 bits per inner cutout shape.

    (2) Alternatively, you could use boolean operations to encode each shape. Also left as a fun problem :)

  • mondobe a day ago

      interface Animal {
        Circle[13] circles();
    
        // Leftover from Intro to CS, remember to remove
        void make_sound();
      }
deadbabe a day ago

Could an AI generate art like this and actually utilize perfect circles, to create whatever you ask?

ajross a day ago

I tend to wonder if stuff like this is an informative boundary on AI capabilities. I mean, you can't ask a LLM today to do that (AFAICT). "Here's a simply-specified but extremely broad search space, solve this problem in it" isn't something that fits the model. But it's a relatively common (if not "easy") task human beings like to show off.

What needs to change to enable this kind of exploration?

  • JohnKemeny a day ago

    Is it impossible, in this day and age, to enjoy a post without thinking about LLMs? It's like an obsession.

    • generationP a day ago

      Nope, but this post is such a neat illustration of the richness of "life" that fits into 39 real parameters (each circle can be coordinatized as 3 real numbers: one for its radius and two for its center) that my first thought on seeing it was also "no surprise then that a matrix with a million entries can talk like an erudite person".

      • jstanley a day ago

        And all of those are simply translation and scaling of 36 parameters with an implicit unit circle at the origin.

        Then if you want to factor out rotations, drop another parameter and say the 1st explicit circle lies on the x axis.

      • floxy a day ago

        Wouldn't you also need a two parameters for the arc starting position and stopping position for each circle, and then a few more to identify the areas that need to be filled, along with the color?

        • laurentlb a day ago

          Once you've drawn the circles, I think you just need to specify which regions are filled.

          Arcs are just intersection of circles, so they are implicit, as far as I can tell.

    • y1n0 a day ago

      It should be obvious that this is entirely up to the reader. Take some responsibility for your own happiness. Nobody else is responsible for your enjoyment of anything.

    • ajross a day ago

      Well, sort of? I mean, I've seen plenty of clever art in my life. I'm still figuring out AI. I posted that in the hope that someone in the community here would show up with something insightful to say.

    • elpocko a day ago

      Yes, it is impossible. People will think about things they find interesting regardless of your (dis-)approval. Who are you even calling "obsessive?" The collective of people who dare to mention algorithms you don't like? I mean, what the fuck?

      • albedoa a day ago

        Calm down dude, for fuck's sake. Read yourself back.

  • abeppu a day ago

    Actually, the (in)famous "sparks of general intelligence paper" about GPT-4 included tasks such as "Draw a unicorn in TikZ" which really is not that far off from this task. There were also examples for drawing cars/trucks/cats etc with SVG.

    But I do think that evolutionary algorithms or MCMC variants could do a better job of this, especially if paired with an auxiliary model for scoring their intermediate results.

    • gwern a day ago

      Yes, this has been done in many forms with other algorithms. You score each generation with a model like CLIP, for example, and then you can evolve 'Mona Lisa made of triangles', say. A constraint like 'exactly 13 circles' will work fine. (And you might experiment with loosening it, like generating a lot of candidates with 5-30 circles each, as a 'library' or 'seeds', before shrinking them all towards 13, to see if you get novel animal designs which are find to find if you simply start the obvious way with 13 circles initialized to random points & sizes.)

  • iamwil a day ago

    I was thinking it could, actually, given a feedback loop. The tool use would a json that takes 13 circles, each with x, y position, radius, and whether it's filled in or empty, and output an image. It could look at the image and iterate.