Gallery
By Jonathan R Reed. Updated .
Saved pieces collect the strongest algorithmic art runs from the generator. Use the gallery to revisit deterministic outputs, compare visual systems, and inspect how seed, symmetry, curve and color choices change each result.
Each piece is treated as a reproducible study. The gallery gives finished outputs a place away from the live controls so visual decisions can be reviewed by composition, color balance, density, and pattern behavior.
Gallery notes
Saved outputs are meant to make comparison easier. A strong study usually shows one clear choice: a curve that creates a readable structure, a seed that produces balanced density, or a color order that makes motion visible. Keeping the gallery separate from the generator makes it easier to review the finished results without changing the settings by accident.
Use the collection as a record of what worked. Related images can reveal how a small rule change affects the final drawing, while isolated pieces can stand on their own as finished algorithmic compositions.
Review saved studies in groups when you want to understand the system. A set of related images can show whether a pattern is getting stronger, noisier, more balanced, or more readable as the settings move.
The collection is also a practical archive for future exports. Keep the pieces that have clear structure, discard near-duplicates, and return to the generator when a saved direction needs another controlled variation.
Open generator Read process notes
Saved artworks stay in this browser only. Use downloads if you want to keep or share them elsewhere.