Five years ago it was an mind-boggling
design concept, but today the idea color-changing pen has morphed into a
working prototype that draws colors from objects and surfaces, natural or
artificial, then lets you use them in all kinds of creative ways. This
real-world version can make over 16,000,000 different tones and store over 100,000 unique colors in its memory.
Imagine the possibilities of Scribble, both
artistic and practical: instead of trying to mix just the right paints to
capture a landscape or replicate a color scheme for your interior remodel, you
can scan the actual colors of environments and use those. Users can then
upload, store, tag and share their color picks for future applications.
The Color Picker by Jinsun Park (shown
below) was a purely conceptual design model at the time, but operated on the
same principle (like the Photoshop eyedropper tool), made to contain a series
of inks that (much like a printer) would mix in the appropriate amounts,
reproducing colors scanned into it. This new variant on the device also
converts the colors into other formats (like binary, decimal and hexadecimal)
that can be saved and deployed for digital art. And with cartridge refills, you
will never need to buy another color of pen.
The applications are myriad: “For the
colour blind, kids, interior decorators, homeowners, teachers, artists,
photographers, designers and students, the Scribble colour picker pen will make
copying an exact colour, any colour from any object, an absolute
breeze. With Scribble you can scan, match or compare colours, draw on
paper or your mobile device.” Of course, you don’t have to scan in a new
color – you can always mix your own on the computer and input that preferred
tone too.
Here is the executive summary from the
company: “Scribble is the first coloring device of its kind that can take
the world of color around you and transfer it directly to either paper or your
favourite mobile device. Simple hold the Scribble’s scanner up to any color,
like on a wall, a book or magazine, a painting or even a child’s toy and within
a second or two that color is stored in Scribble’s internal memory. You can now
instantly draw on paper with the Scribble Ink Pen or draw on a digital device
like an iPad or Wacom Tablet with the Scribble Stylus Pen.”
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