Site Logo
Posts Personal
Gallery
🖼️ Overview 😂 Memes 🎬 Videos ▶️ YouTube
About
← Back

Moon From Book of Shaders

January 23, 2026

Dive into the mesmerizing world of computer graphics programming with this stunning visual demonstration from the renowned “Book of Shaders.” This YouTube Short beautifully illustrates how pure mathematical code can be utilized to generate organic, hyper-realistic imagery—in this case, an incredibly detailed and captivating rendering of the Moon entirely from scratch.

For the uninitiated, fragment shaders are small programs written in GLSL (OpenGL Shading Language) that run directly on the GPU, calculating the color of every single pixel on the screen incredibly fast. The “Book of Shaders,” authored by Patricio Gonzalez Vivo and Jen Lowe, is widely considered the holy grail for artists and developers looking to master this complex but highly rewarding skill.

This specific demonstration highlights how complex mathematical noise functions (like Perlin or Simplex noise) can be manipulated to create the textured craters, uneven lighting, and smooth gradients required to simulate a lunar surface. It is a fantastic example of procedural generation, wherein complex natural patterns emerge not from hand-drawn art, but from elegant geometric equations.

If you are a creative coder, game developer, or technical artist, this video serves as massive inspiration for what can be achieved with shader programming. It proves that with the right application of math and code, the creative possibilities for visual storytelling in a web browser or game engine are practically limitless.

Recommended Further Browsing

Stadium or Donut With Blender3D

Science & Technology

This hilarious guy just won himself all expenses paid Comedy Special R

Science & Technology

Nazir and Adjoa AI Upscale

Science & Technology

Falcon heavy rocket launch up close from 29th April, 2026 shown on twitter/X

Science & Technology
  • Richard Djarbeng
  • Contact Me
© 2026

    Richard Djarbeng's website with technical and personal posts. Tech blogs + real-life adventures in East Africa, USA and Europe