

Frame
Top Mat

Bottom Mat

Dimensions
Image:
8.00" x 6.00"
Mat Border:
2.00"
Frame Width:
0.88"
Overall:
13.50" x 11.50"
Perfect Circles Don't Exist Pi 180 Framed Print

by Jason Padgett

$140.00
Product Details
Perfect Circles Don't Exist Pi 180 framed print by Jason Padgett. Bring your print to life with hundreds of different frame and mat combinations. Our framed prints are assembled, packaged, and shipped by our expert framing staff and delivered "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
Design Details
This is what Pi looks like at a value of 180sin(Pi/180).
This is a drawing of Pi as it expands forever closer to a circle. This is a snapshot of... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
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Framed Print Tags
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Comments (12)
Artist's Description
This is what Pi looks like at a value of 180sin(Pi/180).
This is a drawing of Pi as it expands forever closer to a circle. This is a snapshot of an n-sided polygon with n=180 (or 180 right triangles that when you draw secant lines around the edge gives you an area equal to an n sided polygon with n=180). As n gets larger and approaches infinity the value approaches Pi forever because you are getting closer and closer to a circle for ever and as you fill in the edge of the circle (and the edge of the 'circle' gets smoother as n gets larger). The area gets a little larger and the circumference get larger also as you add sides (as n grows larger), but the diameter stays the same. When you use secant lines (a line through two points on the edge of the 'circle' every two degrees in this drawing) you are approaching Pi from the inside of the circle. This is the inner boundary of Pi. If you use tangent lines around the drawing (a line through only one point around the 'circle') then as you...
About Jason Padgett

Jason D. Padgett is an artist and thinker whose journey challenges conventional perception. As the author of Struck by Genius, a book that has been optioned for a major motion picture, his unique artistic perspective has captivated audiences worldwide. What makes Jason’s work even more extraordinary is his experience with motion blindness (akinetopsia), a condition that causes him to perceive the world in discrete frames, like stop-motion animation or a flipbook. Rather than seeing continuous motion, he perceives reality as a series of still images. While many might see this as a limitation, Jason has embraced it as a gift, using it to explore intricate patterns and structures that often go unnoticed. His hand-drawn works reflect a...
Masha Batkova
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Irina Sztukowski
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Jon Burch Photography
Congratulations on your new sale Jason
Fe Loy
congrats...i hope soon i sale my foto
Fe Loy
congrats...i hope soon i sale my foto
Dean Wittle
Congratulations on your sale!
Gull G
Congratulations on your recent sale !
Bill Cannon
Congrats on your sale!!!