Glitched Signals from a Distant Planet: Unseen Images of the Galactic Fossils

Glitches visual signal from another planet

Unreleased 3D renders of glitch-infused galactic fossil objects—gritty, distorted, and inspired by Dune, Interstellar, and Alien. Perfect for fans of sci-fi art, digital decay aesthetics, and speculative design that feels pulled from another dimension.

Glitched Fossils from a Distant Future

There was a strange and chaotic phase right at the beginning of building this website—when I was still juggling a corporate 9–5 and pouring my evenings into shaping steel bones from imagined worlds.

During that time, not all my sculptures were ready in physical form. Some only existed in 3D space—wireframes, mesh, and surface simulations—hovering in digital limbo like artifacts waiting for excavation. I had the itch to share them but lacked the time and hands to finish them all. So I began experimenting.

I started using 3D rendering not just as a prototyping tool but as a way to present the work. It was a hack, really—giving myself permission to move faster. I’d apply raw lighting, tweak materials, add color grading filters. A mix of sci-fi palettes and industrial ruin-core. Think CRT noise meets Martian geology.

Glitch Art

At the time, I didn’t have a term for what I was doing. Later, I discovered it aligned with what’s known as glitch art—art that embraces digital errors, compression artifacts, and image distortion as part of the aesthetic. At the time, I was just trying to signal: These objects are coming. They’re not finished, but they exist. You just can’t touch them yet.

Most of the renders were riddled with digital grain, pixel burn, interlacing—intentional visual noise. It wasn’t clean. It wasn’t polished. And I kind of loved it.

I didn’t show them here. In fact, they only lived in the wild briefly—posted during beta-test phases on Instagram where they were largely ignored (pretty face platforms don’t exactly reward cryptic industrial fossils with sci-fi decay vibes). But I’ve always felt like these images deserved a second life.

Visual Signal Release

So here’s the plan: I’ll be releasing these lost renders slowly, one after another, following the release cadence of the actual sculptures. I made a massive amount of them—each with its own surreal aesthetic. They feel like stills from a forgotten film, or blueprints from an alien excavation site.

If you're into glitch aesthetics, speculative artifacts, retro-futurism, or that feeling you get watching the opening of Alien or flipping through a dusty Heavy Metal magazine—this is for you.

I’m finally giving these visual experiments their rightful space here. Not as marketing. Not as product. Just as digital fossils from the early phases of imagining something that wasn’t real… until it was.

Stay tuned. Things are about to get glitchy.


Previous
Previous

Elon vs. Trump Meme War Explodes—And We Got Dragged Back In

Next
Next

Assembling the Sentinel: A Cosmic Artifact Straight Out of a Sci-Fi Movie