stavros 15 hours ago

I was about to comment that I also made a small LED panel, but then realized it was me.

Here's the latest LED thing I'm working on (the design isn't mine): https://immich.home.stavros.io/share/oXerU8gnLn-dNHunPOg8lM8...

  • Lerc 12 hours ago

    Do you know if the panels can be bodged to be non square? There shouldn't be a lot of fancy wiring to screw up if it's all WS2812. Can you (delicately) chop a few LEDs out and bridge the connections?

    (hoping I have seeded this idea, so I'm not the first one to attempt this)

    • sokoloff 3 hours ago

      I think you'd be far better off to make a custom PCB in whatever shape you like from the like of JLCPCB, PCBWay, or others.

      The WS2812s here all connect to each other in series, so if you cut the board down, you'll have to replace the cut connections with bodge wires. To my mind, that plus the cutting is way more work than just making a PCB in exactly the shape you want.

      You can get cheap PCBs for $5-$6 for qty 5 100mm x 100mm boards delivered to your door in the US. Add on LEDs at $0.03 to $0.05 each and I'd way rather make than modify here.

    • tiku 5 hours ago

      Perhaps a stupid question but why not just not use those LEDs? Shut down in the software..

      • bombcar 2 hours ago

        Because you want the panel to fit a non-square shape, with no room for "leftovers" - think making it round to fit in a doorknob hole or oval to go in place of a car brand badge, etc.

        • stavros 18 minutes ago

          In that case, it would definitely be much cheaper to design a custom PCB and get it assembled. It would probably take you much less time than all the cutting and soldering.

    • stavros 8 hours ago

      Sure, you can connect the LEDs together however you like (am I misunderstanding the question?).

      • Lerc 7 hours ago

        Theoretically you can. It's whether it all goes pear shaped when you take a Dremel to the board to make it

            OO    OOOO   OO
            OO    OOOO   OO
            OO    OOOO   OO
            O    OOOOOO   O
            O    OOOOOO   O
            O    OOOOOO   O
                OOOOOOOO
                OOOOOOOO
        
        And how fiddly it is to stitch up the edges. I shall find out in a couple of days when the panels arrive.
        • stavros 7 hours ago

          Oh that's what you mean! Yes, you can, but you'd have to bridge all the data connections by hand. Much easier to just leave those LEDs off in software.

    • ramses0 4 hours ago

      I mean... as a lay-person, you've got point-lights and his isolation/diffusion layers in between. If you're 3d-printing your diffusion-thingy, then you've got tons of room to play games with the shape of the final glow. Even moving light via '265μm with 64 Fiber, Optical Grade Plastic Light Guide' if you're not hitting the corners well enough.

  • phil42 11 hours ago

    How did you connect the individual smaller LED panels together? I guess the cool color patterns and the individual addressing comes from WLED then?

    • stavros 8 hours ago

      There's a photo of the panels connected to each other, each panel has three input and three output pads, and you solder those together. The software just sees one long strip, and you configure the shape of it so it corresponds to what you have in reality.

  • MomsAVoxell 7 hours ago

    Nice work! I've done a few LED thingies too ..

    https://magicshifter.net/

    .. and, I recycled some old scoreboard display panels to make something similar to your latest project, also:

    About the panels: https://metalab.at/wiki/Blinkofant/LED-Display_History

    The Blinkophant: https://i.imgur.com/3aPytEp.jpeg

    • stavros 4 hours ago

      I made something close to MagicShifter a while ago, I didn't add an accelerometer, though:

      https://www.stavros.io/posts/behold-ledonardo/

      I would really like to make it work with an accelerometer, as right now it's a bit fiddly to get the right speed for images, but I don't know if I can make it work.

      • MomsAVoxell 3 hours ago

        Not just accelerometer, but magnetometer too. :)

        This means you can basically use the magicshifter3000 as a knob. Or, a slider.

        Its very fun with MIDI.

        :)

        • stavros 3 hours ago

          Oooh fantastic! That's the kind of thing I really like to see.

          • MomsAVoxell 3 hours ago

            Perhaps you will understand what this is, then:

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syP8_lccIQA

            :)

            • stavros 3 hours ago

              Haha, amazing! Is it based on the accelerometer, or do you have a microphone connected somehow? I can't tell whether you're tapping the desk they're on.

              Then again, the right ones light up more than the left ones, so I think you're tapping on the right edge of the desk. Very cool!

              • MomsAVoxell 2 hours ago

                The accelerometer and the desk, being tapped by me offscreen just to be sure things were responding .. alas, they are kind of hard to keep in one big pile, but yes very fun to play with en masse! :)

                (This was some years back, note.)

    • stavros 7 hours ago

      This is great! Your TLS cert is invalid, though, so the site doesn't load properly, I think.

      • MomsAVoxell 3 hours ago

        Yeah, expired a while ago, its a pretty old site and we have to get the old gang back together to fix it.

        Thanks for checking out the magicShifter3000!

        I've got a new one designed, currently in prototyping stages .. a bit more powerful and a lot more oriented towards audio/synthesis. Same form-factor, and probably MS3000 and midiShifter will have an ecosystem ..

        • stavros 3 hours ago

          If you have the site on GitHub, you can deploy it to Cloudflare Pages with a few clicks, and it will take care of all of that stuff for you.

          Also, a few friends and I have a maker Discord server and you'd fit right in, I can send an invitation if you like! My email is in my profile.

          • MomsAVoxell an hour ago

            Server: not my department. :)

            But yeah, we'll probably reboot magicShifter soon ..

  • BolexNOLA 15 hours ago

    spidermanspointing.jpg

    Jokes aside this is super cool. I always find LED panels really interesting to look at under the hood. I’m so picky about the ones I like to use almost purely based on vibes when filming. They’re just one of those things that you immediately know you’re going to love or hate in post the moment they hit your subject

Nevermark an hour ago

For a second I thought this was about custom LED construction.

But apparently, LEDs require advanced processes unlikely to be available for makers, anytime in the near future.

However, Zinc sulfide phosphor mixed into epoxy can be used to make voltage activated luminescence. For some interesting guidance on "doping" for color, I present a 1953 patent:

> zinc" sulphide' activated by both copper ad manganese in accordance, with the present invention is strongly electroluminescent, the addition of. manganese to the copper-activated material resulting in a shift in the color of luminescence toward the red end of the spectrum. Thus, the materials of the invention, when excited by a fluctuating electric field, show colors of luminescence ranging from bluish-green through shades of bluish-white, pinkish-white and yellow to orange. [0]

Looks like some level of RGB was possible from the get go.

[0] https://patents.google.com/patent/US2743238A/en

  • jononor an hour ago

    Cool! What kind of voltage ranges are we talking, and how toxic is Zinc sulfide phosphor?

    • Nevermark an hour ago

      Not that toxic, unless inhaled (take precautions) or ingested, or heated to high temperature, which produces a toxic gas.

      Doping of course can change that.

      May require 100+ V AC at 500-2000 Hz. So probably not the right element to implement 4k in! Or for an early education science experiment, unfortunately.

      I don't know what the currents would be, proportions or dimensions of epoxy, or much else. Some more research would be required. But in terms of resistive heating creating gas: measure and be careful!

scottbez1 15 hours ago

On the topic of small LED panels, Jason of Evil Genius Labs has been making some really small LED panels [0] with addressable 1mm x 1mm LEDs (yes, individually addressable AND only 1mm on each side!). Fitting 128 onto a 1" circle is pretty sweet.

I keep meaning to design some PCBs with them [1] but it's too far down my ever-growing list of projects to see the light of day...

[0] https://www.evilgeniuslabs.org/one-inch-fibonacci128

[1] https://www.lcsc.com/product-detail/C5349953.html

  • zokier 6 hours ago

    Kingbright recently released 01005 (0.45mm x 0.25mm x 0.2mm) sized LEDs, which afaik are one of the smallest ones easily available. One neat idea would be to pack those on DIP14 sized pcb, making tiny neat character display. I guess something like 5x7 or 6x8 matrix could be doable with small mcu to drive them.

    For those 1mm addressable RGB LEDs I've been thinking how you could do cool cyberpunk looks by stringing them on some hairthin magnet wire and sticking them on your body/face/hair/etc. Blend them in with some latex or something if needed. Just need to hide the controller/battery somewhere.

  • wkat4242 7 hours ago

    Those are just really small WS2812, I get those at 160 led per meter on a strip of 5 bucks per meter. I just mean to say they are cheaply available in many form factors. I use them a lot in cosplay clothing.

  • alias_neo 10 hours ago

    Ah, the joy of being a Brit. That first link is just full of purple rectangles containing the text "content not viewable in your region" (Imgur).

    I'm feeling safer already. sigh.

    Looks like a fun site though, I'll take a look when I'm not on my work computer.

  • stavros 15 hours ago

    Why are you doing this to me

foofoo12 4 hours ago

For the diffuser, there's a nice one or two in all LED/OLED monitors. More stuff in there too, acrylic/polycarbonate glass and a Fresnel lens. Worth scavenging if you come across a broken one.

  • mortenjorck 2 hours ago

    I think you mean "LCD/LED" monitors (where "LED" is commonly used to mean an LCD panel with an LED backlight, and "LCD" is used to differentiate old CCFL-backlit LCD panels).

    OLED screens do not have a backlight and thus don't have a diffuser.

    • foofoo12 2 hours ago

      Whoops, guilty as charged. Thanks.

  • stavros 3 hours ago

    Oh that's a great idea! This also reminds me of the video where the guy took out the LED panel and used just the light and the Fresnel lens to make a window with very natural-looking light.

smusamashah 9 hours ago

I dont understand it. The resolution is only 8x8. How does the animation at the end looks so smooth and way higher resolution?

  • stavros 8 hours ago

    The diffuser fakes the resolution, basically, by blending the colors together physically.

    • smusamashah 3 hours ago

      I believe you, my brain doesn't. Those movements are so smooth. The line where two different colours merge have no sharp edges and look perfectly curved. Only thing edgy was the very last blinking animation where there weren't any colours.

      Thinking more, if there were only 4 LEDs I can imagine how they would look like diffused.

      Initially I was thinking if 8x8 can show all those smooth details and motions, can it be used to show any other higher resolution imagery instead of just moving colours.

      • stavros 3 hours ago

        I think the thing that fools us here is the fact that we're used to pixels being discrete, so it doesn't "look" low-res because the colors blend into each other. If you imagine that each LED produces a small circle onto the diffuser, and that this circle overlaps the ones around it a bit, it gets easier to see through the illusion.

        It's much easier to understand when you can change the distance of the diffuser to the panel (which I did when testing), because then you can see the lights go from little squares with lots of dark space around them, to this, to big blobs of one color.

masto 6 hours ago

LED matrix panels are tons of fun! I strung a bunch of them together to make a marquee across my basement soffit: https://youtu.be/W0_3rzvq9Ks?si=aTT_uOZfOYh9NLUi

I have to resist the urge to tile every surface with blinky lights. I think part of the appeal goes back to why I enjoyed writing programs on my C64 to bounce my name around the screen. It’s a limited playground, and limitations inspire creativity.

  • stavros 3 hours ago

    This looks fantastic. Your basement really has a nice aesthetic to it, and that marquee looks great in it!

mytailorisrich 12 days ago

The diffuser really makes this. The resulting effect looks great.

  • stavros 15 hours ago

    It really did! It looked much better than I hoped, I really liked the result.

Havoc 10 hours ago

Tried my hand at this too. Except more janky and was aiming at lots of output.

LED get freaking hot fast at higher wattages and quickly found myself dealing with heat sinks etc.

  • stavros 4 hours ago

    Do you need to run them at max brightness? I run them at 10% or so, they're really bright.

Lerc 12 hours ago

I have a bunch of these 8x8 panels on their way from AliExpress right now for an art project that a part will look remarkably like the video. V1 will probably be a 32x32 just like it.

I still haven't decided if I want to have a partition grid between the panel and the diffuser to make square edge pixels. It's definitely going to have a rp2350 inside. PIO is the best thing ever.

cantalopes 5 hours ago

I wonder what material is diffuser made of

  • stavros 4 hours ago

    It's just this:

    > a two-layer white square out of PLA