Thoughts from a Recreational Physicist
I’ve added a new gallery of images. Rather than just working through more random 2 point fractals, this is a gallery of them with just a simple setup. One rotation and one purely scaling transformation. Even with this restriction I was surprised at the number of distinct shapes I was able to generate.
One of my favorite series is the circles of circles which is built of circles all the way down. I had never seen these before and they have a beautiful simplicity, plus I find the whole concept mind blowing. At least with the cantor set construction, it stuck with line segments dividing into a “dust”. The circles of circles, especially the linked ones just throws me for a loop, even though it isn’t really any different than any of the other shapes.
The other two series that stood out were the scalloped and spiral/pinwheel series. There was just something about how clean and effervescent the shapes came out that I really liked.
What is that, Morse code? That my friends is the cantor set. It is one of the examples of basic topology and one of the objects that highlight many of the non-intuitive aspects of infinities.
The most common construction is to take a line and remove the middle third. Next you remove the middle thirds of the two remaining segments. You keep removing the middles of every segment that is left. If you could continue for ever, you would be left with an infinite “dust” of disconnected points.
We can build one with two simple transforms. Just contract by 2/3rds at two different points and the attractor is a cantor set. The next images are going to be simple tweaks of the cantor set, and the fractal space will grow from there.

roughly square 2
This is similar to the last one, but the angles are 180 and 90 ish. You can see the similarities with the last update.