Tools, art, merch & other things we couldn't not make.
Drag the tiles into place and see how close you get.
Did you know: this little game is loosely inspired by the Munsell color system — a physical model where colors are arranged in a 3D space by hue, value, and chroma. Real versions of it look like huge sculptural trees made of color chips.
It’s used in everything from paint manufacturing to soil science and even forensic analysis. Here, it’s just a simplified way to feel how subtle color differences actually are — and how easily our perception drifts.
Colour sorting puzzle. Use Tab to move between tiles. Press Space or Enter to pick up a tile, then arrow keys to move it left or right, then Space or Enter again to place it. Press Escape to cancel.
Tune the sliders, generate, download. No two patterns are the same.
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Upload your design and see where the eye goes first.
People have been studying where we look for over a century — first with mechanical eye-trackers, today with cameras and machine learning. Brands use it to test packaging, websites, even supermarket shelves.
This version isn’t a scientific tool — just a lightweight way to notice how your attention moves. Sometimes the “obvious” focal point isn’t where your eye actually goes.
Play, watch the pattern form, and download the result.
These patterns are inspired by Chladni figures — shapes that appear when sound vibrations organize particles into visible structures. Discovered in the 18th century, they revealed that sound isn’t just something we hear, but something that has form.Here it’s a slowed-down, digital version — more meditative than physical. You’re watching order emerge from noise, one frame at a time.