The lesson here is that following the Golden Ratio for "natural" art ironically give much better results than an organic approximation. While it feels mechanistic, the golden ratio was originally observed in nature.
How? Just look at the space between lines and how it stays almost exactly the same. Then look at the golden ratio and you'll see the in-between space increases rapidly. If you still disagree, please explain.
The lesson here is that following the Golden Ratio for "natural" art ironically give much better results than an organic approximation. While it feels mechanistic, the golden ratio was originally observed in nature.
That's not the golden ratio; it's just spirals
I wish those spirals were powerful, it would be cool to have spiral powers
This town is infested with spirals
The spirals are approximating the golden ratio, although it's missing some more scaffolding... https://letstalkscience.ca/sites/default/files/styles/width_800px/public/webimage-2023_Original_Golden-spirals_Bil_ResourceBody.png?itok=tvXEDmqr
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How? Just look at the space between lines and how it stays almost exactly the same. Then look at the golden ratio and you'll see the in-between space increases rapidly. If you still disagree, please explain.
spirals are dangerous.
It's an example not a tutorial
Lesson 5: The shortest route is a detour.
JOJO MENTIONED WRYYYYYYYYYYY
particle accelerator