AmigaART
This is a community repo for saving cool vintage digital art. Magazine descriptions or history of the photo is strongly encouraged as well as the artists name. I know the community name is AmigaART but any vintage digital art is welcome.
Community Rules
-
• This is a place for vintage art. (Before the year 2000)
-
• Any artwork that is newer will be removed as it does not fit the community. There are plenty of other places to post new pixel art.
-
• Please be respectful in the comments.
-
• Any nsfw needs to be tagged as such. (no matter how few pixels it consists of.)
If you know what it was created on then please post the system and or the software that it was created on. Restorations and tributes are very much welcome as well. Just be sure to cite the inspiration or the original source.
I was inspired to create this from RetroAhoy’s restoration of the 4 Byte Burger. A fantastic watch if you have 40 minutes to spare.
The community photo is his restoration of the 4 Byte Burger with some adjustments to match the photo of the photo of the screen done by myself.
The header is a photo I found on a forum of an award-winning pixel illustration from Ron Cobb named Skybox. It won 1st prize for illustration at the second annual PixelPaint competition, in 1990. PixelPaint is the program which was used to make this image which was the first full color paint application made for Macintosh around 1988.
The op had made some adjustments to the photo and had wrote out this description below for the photo. Thank you op if you ever read this.
“I really like how the image is a twist on the computer graphics concept of a “sky box”, turning it into a wonderfully surreal image juxtaposed over a naturalistic background.
I scoured the net and this was the best version of the image that I could find. You can see most of the pixels well, but unfortunately there is some .JPG distortion on the clouds. This is definitely pixel art, it’s just a high resolution image; you need to zoom in to see the building blocks.
I upscaled for clarity and converted to .PNG to prevent further degradation of the file.”