Processing Foundation
We cultivate creative coding software and communities to empower learners, coders, and artists to shape equitable digital futures.

The latest Processing Foundation Impact Report is here!
In 2025, p5.js turned 2.0, empowering artists and learners to work with variable fonts, GPU-accelerated shaders, and expanded color modes such as OKLCH for richer, more expressive palettes. Today, p5.js has over 800 contributors, with 50 of them actively participating in the latest releases. Meanwhile, Processing 4 merged 121 pull requests and put out 10 releases in a single year, sustained by a contributor community that continues to grow more welcoming.
But numbers only tell part of the story. Processing Foundation’s impact was felt by artists, coders, and educators across continents:
“The most rewarding part of all this is that I got to make a real impact — not someday in the future, but now. As a college student, I helped bring a long-requested feature to life, touched by so many hands, and about to be used by thousands of people around the world.” — Vivek Bopaliya, Gujarat, India.
“The opportunity to be a fellow has been life-changing. I look forward to continuing to be a part of the community and an active contributor.” — Daniel Corbani, São José dos Campos, Brazil.
“I am excited to share with my kids and continue learning it myself. I NEVER thought I would be able to code ANYTHING.” — Liz Trow, El Paso, Texas.
By centering open source software, education, and innovative programs, Processing Foundation makes creative coding accessible to communities historically marginalized by dominant technology.
If your journey has been impacted by Processing or p5.js, please consider supporting our work.
🔗 Read the full report: processingfoundation.report
🔗 Support our mission: processingfoundation.org/donate
📍See image descriptions in the pinned comment below.

The latest Processing Foundation Impact Report is here!
In 2025, p5.js turned 2.0, empowering artists and learners to work with variable fonts, GPU-accelerated shaders, and expanded color modes such as OKLCH for richer, more expressive palettes. Today, p5.js has over 800 contributors, with 50 of them actively participating in the latest releases. Meanwhile, Processing 4 merged 121 pull requests and put out 10 releases in a single year, sustained by a contributor community that continues to grow more welcoming.
But numbers only tell part of the story. Processing Foundation’s impact was felt by artists, coders, and educators across continents:
“The most rewarding part of all this is that I got to make a real impact — not someday in the future, but now. As a college student, I helped bring a long-requested feature to life, touched by so many hands, and about to be used by thousands of people around the world.” — Vivek Bopaliya, Gujarat, India.
“The opportunity to be a fellow has been life-changing. I look forward to continuing to be a part of the community and an active contributor.” — Daniel Corbani, São José dos Campos, Brazil.
“I am excited to share with my kids and continue learning it myself. I NEVER thought I would be able to code ANYTHING.” — Liz Trow, El Paso, Texas.
By centering open source software, education, and innovative programs, Processing Foundation makes creative coding accessible to communities historically marginalized by dominant technology.
If your journey has been impacted by Processing or p5.js, please consider supporting our work.
🔗 Read the full report: processingfoundation.report
🔗 Support our mission: processingfoundation.org/donate
📍See image descriptions in the pinned comment below.

The latest Processing Foundation Impact Report is here!
In 2025, p5.js turned 2.0, empowering artists and learners to work with variable fonts, GPU-accelerated shaders, and expanded color modes such as OKLCH for richer, more expressive palettes. Today, p5.js has over 800 contributors, with 50 of them actively participating in the latest releases. Meanwhile, Processing 4 merged 121 pull requests and put out 10 releases in a single year, sustained by a contributor community that continues to grow more welcoming.
But numbers only tell part of the story. Processing Foundation’s impact was felt by artists, coders, and educators across continents:
“The most rewarding part of all this is that I got to make a real impact — not someday in the future, but now. As a college student, I helped bring a long-requested feature to life, touched by so many hands, and about to be used by thousands of people around the world.” — Vivek Bopaliya, Gujarat, India.
“The opportunity to be a fellow has been life-changing. I look forward to continuing to be a part of the community and an active contributor.” — Daniel Corbani, São José dos Campos, Brazil.
“I am excited to share with my kids and continue learning it myself. I NEVER thought I would be able to code ANYTHING.” — Liz Trow, El Paso, Texas.
By centering open source software, education, and innovative programs, Processing Foundation makes creative coding accessible to communities historically marginalized by dominant technology.
If your journey has been impacted by Processing or p5.js, please consider supporting our work.
🔗 Read the full report: processingfoundation.report
🔗 Support our mission: processingfoundation.org/donate
📍See image descriptions in the pinned comment below.

The latest Processing Foundation Impact Report is here!
In 2025, p5.js turned 2.0, empowering artists and learners to work with variable fonts, GPU-accelerated shaders, and expanded color modes such as OKLCH for richer, more expressive palettes. Today, p5.js has over 800 contributors, with 50 of them actively participating in the latest releases. Meanwhile, Processing 4 merged 121 pull requests and put out 10 releases in a single year, sustained by a contributor community that continues to grow more welcoming.
But numbers only tell part of the story. Processing Foundation’s impact was felt by artists, coders, and educators across continents:
“The most rewarding part of all this is that I got to make a real impact — not someday in the future, but now. As a college student, I helped bring a long-requested feature to life, touched by so many hands, and about to be used by thousands of people around the world.” — Vivek Bopaliya, Gujarat, India.
“The opportunity to be a fellow has been life-changing. I look forward to continuing to be a part of the community and an active contributor.” — Daniel Corbani, São José dos Campos, Brazil.
“I am excited to share with my kids and continue learning it myself. I NEVER thought I would be able to code ANYTHING.” — Liz Trow, El Paso, Texas.
By centering open source software, education, and innovative programs, Processing Foundation makes creative coding accessible to communities historically marginalized by dominant technology.
If your journey has been impacted by Processing or p5.js, please consider supporting our work.
🔗 Read the full report: processingfoundation.report
🔗 Support our mission: processingfoundation.org/donate
📍See image descriptions in the pinned comment below.

The latest Processing Foundation Impact Report is here!
In 2025, p5.js turned 2.0, empowering artists and learners to work with variable fonts, GPU-accelerated shaders, and expanded color modes such as OKLCH for richer, more expressive palettes. Today, p5.js has over 800 contributors, with 50 of them actively participating in the latest releases. Meanwhile, Processing 4 merged 121 pull requests and put out 10 releases in a single year, sustained by a contributor community that continues to grow more welcoming.
But numbers only tell part of the story. Processing Foundation’s impact was felt by artists, coders, and educators across continents:
“The most rewarding part of all this is that I got to make a real impact — not someday in the future, but now. As a college student, I helped bring a long-requested feature to life, touched by so many hands, and about to be used by thousands of people around the world.” — Vivek Bopaliya, Gujarat, India.
“The opportunity to be a fellow has been life-changing. I look forward to continuing to be a part of the community and an active contributor.” — Daniel Corbani, São José dos Campos, Brazil.
“I am excited to share with my kids and continue learning it myself. I NEVER thought I would be able to code ANYTHING.” — Liz Trow, El Paso, Texas.
By centering open source software, education, and innovative programs, Processing Foundation makes creative coding accessible to communities historically marginalized by dominant technology.
If your journey has been impacted by Processing or p5.js, please consider supporting our work.
🔗 Read the full report: processingfoundation.report
🔗 Support our mission: processingfoundation.org/donate
📍See image descriptions in the pinned comment below.

The latest Processing Foundation Impact Report is here!
In 2025, p5.js turned 2.0, empowering artists and learners to work with variable fonts, GPU-accelerated shaders, and expanded color modes such as OKLCH for richer, more expressive palettes. Today, p5.js has over 800 contributors, with 50 of them actively participating in the latest releases. Meanwhile, Processing 4 merged 121 pull requests and put out 10 releases in a single year, sustained by a contributor community that continues to grow more welcoming.
But numbers only tell part of the story. Processing Foundation’s impact was felt by artists, coders, and educators across continents:
“The most rewarding part of all this is that I got to make a real impact — not someday in the future, but now. As a college student, I helped bring a long-requested feature to life, touched by so many hands, and about to be used by thousands of people around the world.” — Vivek Bopaliya, Gujarat, India.
“The opportunity to be a fellow has been life-changing. I look forward to continuing to be a part of the community and an active contributor.” — Daniel Corbani, São José dos Campos, Brazil.
“I am excited to share with my kids and continue learning it myself. I NEVER thought I would be able to code ANYTHING.” — Liz Trow, El Paso, Texas.
By centering open source software, education, and innovative programs, Processing Foundation makes creative coding accessible to communities historically marginalized by dominant technology.
If your journey has been impacted by Processing or p5.js, please consider supporting our work.
🔗 Read the full report: processingfoundation.report
🔗 Support our mission: processingfoundation.org/donate
📍See image descriptions in the pinned comment below.

The latest Processing Foundation Impact Report is here!
In 2025, p5.js turned 2.0, empowering artists and learners to work with variable fonts, GPU-accelerated shaders, and expanded color modes such as OKLCH for richer, more expressive palettes. Today, p5.js has over 800 contributors, with 50 of them actively participating in the latest releases. Meanwhile, Processing 4 merged 121 pull requests and put out 10 releases in a single year, sustained by a contributor community that continues to grow more welcoming.
But numbers only tell part of the story. Processing Foundation’s impact was felt by artists, coders, and educators across continents:
“The most rewarding part of all this is that I got to make a real impact — not someday in the future, but now. As a college student, I helped bring a long-requested feature to life, touched by so many hands, and about to be used by thousands of people around the world.” — Vivek Bopaliya, Gujarat, India.
“The opportunity to be a fellow has been life-changing. I look forward to continuing to be a part of the community and an active contributor.” — Daniel Corbani, São José dos Campos, Brazil.
“I am excited to share with my kids and continue learning it myself. I NEVER thought I would be able to code ANYTHING.” — Liz Trow, El Paso, Texas.
By centering open source software, education, and innovative programs, Processing Foundation makes creative coding accessible to communities historically marginalized by dominant technology.
If your journey has been impacted by Processing or p5.js, please consider supporting our work.
🔗 Read the full report: processingfoundation.report
🔗 Support our mission: processingfoundation.org/donate
📍See image descriptions in the pinned comment below.

Processing Community Day is a global, community-led celebration that brings together artists, designers, technologists, educators, and open-source communities across the world.
This year marks a major milestone as we celebrate 25 years of Processing with a special Processing Community Day gathering in Linz, Austria, hosted in partnership with the Ars Electronica Festival (@arselectronica). It’s a time to reflect on Processing’s history, celebrate the people who shaped it, and imagine the future together.
If your organization believes in open-source tools, creative technology, and global community building, we’d love to connect. Sponsorship includes opportunities such as festival visibility, program partnerships, and featured work on the iconic Deep Space 8K.
Interested? Email us at give@processingfoundation.org 💜
#Processing #ProcessingCommunityDay #PCD #CreativeCoding #ArsElectronica

✦ 𝙣𝙚𝙬 𝙤𝙣 𝙤𝙗𝙟𝙠𝙩𝙤𝙧 ✦ Transiciones Latentes: About Curiosity And Play / written by Raquel Gaudard
in conversation with @tamamoyre
“How the machine interprets it… sometimes you are thoroughly surprised.”
Transiciones Latentes was released via boatloads.art through a special partnership between @processingorg and @artontezos
“Every technology carries an aesthetic.” @tamamoyre
read the full interview on objktor

✦ 𝙣𝙚𝙬 𝙤𝙣 𝙤𝙗𝙟𝙠𝙩𝙤𝙧 ✦ Transiciones Latentes: About Curiosity And Play / written by Raquel Gaudard
in conversation with @tamamoyre
“How the machine interprets it… sometimes you are thoroughly surprised.”
Transiciones Latentes was released via boatloads.art through a special partnership between @processingorg and @artontezos
“Every technology carries an aesthetic.” @tamamoyre
read the full interview on objktor

✦ 𝙣𝙚𝙬 𝙤𝙣 𝙤𝙗𝙟𝙠𝙩𝙤𝙧 ✦ Transiciones Latentes: About Curiosity And Play / written by Raquel Gaudard
in conversation with @tamamoyre
“How the machine interprets it… sometimes you are thoroughly surprised.”
Transiciones Latentes was released via boatloads.art through a special partnership between @processingorg and @artontezos
“Every technology carries an aesthetic.” @tamamoyre
read the full interview on objktor

✦ 𝙣𝙚𝙬 𝙤𝙣 𝙤𝙗𝙟𝙠𝙩𝙤𝙧 ✦ Transiciones Latentes: About Curiosity And Play / written by Raquel Gaudard
in conversation with @tamamoyre
“How the machine interprets it… sometimes you are thoroughly surprised.”
Transiciones Latentes was released via boatloads.art through a special partnership between @processingorg and @artontezos
“Every technology carries an aesthetic.” @tamamoyre
read the full interview on objktor

In March, the 2025 Processing Foundation Fellowship project “Call/Code/Response” premiered at @musiccenterla!
Created by Ana C, @paytoncroskey, and @jiwonhaam, “Call/Code/Response” used p5.js to explore how creative coding can expand into live performances by drawing on hip-hop, slam poetry, and call-and-response traditions. Attendees also interacted with the artists’ custom p5.js tool hands-on at a live workstation.
Thank you to everyone who came out and engaged with the work. Huge thanks to @futureofnonfiction for the invitation.
🔗 Watch “Call/Code/Response” through the link in our bio

In March, the 2025 Processing Foundation Fellowship project “Call/Code/Response” premiered at @musiccenterla!
Created by Ana C, @paytoncroskey, and @jiwonhaam, “Call/Code/Response” used p5.js to explore how creative coding can expand into live performances by drawing on hip-hop, slam poetry, and call-and-response traditions. Attendees also interacted with the artists’ custom p5.js tool hands-on at a live workstation.
Thank you to everyone who came out and engaged with the work. Huge thanks to @futureofnonfiction for the invitation.
🔗 Watch “Call/Code/Response” through the link in our bio

In March, the 2025 Processing Foundation Fellowship project “Call/Code/Response” premiered at @musiccenterla!
Created by Ana C, @paytoncroskey, and @jiwonhaam, “Call/Code/Response” used p5.js to explore how creative coding can expand into live performances by drawing on hip-hop, slam poetry, and call-and-response traditions. Attendees also interacted with the artists’ custom p5.js tool hands-on at a live workstation.
Thank you to everyone who came out and engaged with the work. Huge thanks to @futureofnonfiction for the invitation.
🔗 Watch “Call/Code/Response” through the link in our bio

In March, the 2025 Processing Foundation Fellowship project “Call/Code/Response” premiered at @musiccenterla!
Created by Ana C, @paytoncroskey, and @jiwonhaam, “Call/Code/Response” used p5.js to explore how creative coding can expand into live performances by drawing on hip-hop, slam poetry, and call-and-response traditions. Attendees also interacted with the artists’ custom p5.js tool hands-on at a live workstation.
Thank you to everyone who came out and engaged with the work. Huge thanks to @futureofnonfiction for the invitation.
🔗 Watch “Call/Code/Response” through the link in our bio
How to bridge the gap between simple shapes and complex generative systems? In this @p5xjs tutorial, @tamamoyre explores the core principles of building organic, expressive sketches.
She breaks down the difference between random and noise, dives into coordinate transformations, and experimented with the updated color modes in the latest version of p5.js. If you’re looking to move beyond static drawings and start designing flexible, living systems, this tutorial provides a clear roadmap for your practice.
This tutorial is part of our ongoing series in partnership with the Tezos Foundation, exploring how to create with p5.js 2.0+.
🔗 Check it out and start exploring with the example sketch – link in bio.
📣 p5.js 2.0 Artist Series Drop #2: Featuring Tamara Moura Costa
Tamara is a generative artist based in Buenos Aires who works primarily with computational processes, exploring visuals, code, and electronics. From live performances to physical installations, her practice is consistently guided by a sense of curiosity, play, and nature.
In this release, ‘Transiciones Latentes’, Tamara explores the delicate balance between structure and spontaneity. What began as a playful sketch of tiny flowers evolved into a sophisticated exploration of tonal relationships, rhythmic textures, and the dialogue between different directions and shapes.
In her tutorial, Tamara breaks down the core building blocks of generative systems in p5.js 2.0+. She demonstrates the fundamental differences between random vs. noise, the logic behind coordinate transformations, and how to utilize the new color spaces available in the latest version of p5.js.
Alongside the tutorial, she releases her project on Bootloader, inviting collectors to explore a playful, ever-evolving atmosphere where formal structure meets unpredictable generative outcomes.
🔗 Check out her tutorial and view her release on Bootloader – link in bio.
Produced in partnership with the Tezos Foundation and Bootloader, a generative art platform on @tezos
Call / Code / Response was developed through the Processing Foundation Fellowship as an experiment in community-centered creative technology.
For the 2025 cohort, fellows were paired with community partners to co-develop software responding to real artistic needs. Fellows Ana C., Jiwon Ham, and Payton Croskey partnered with four community organizations to support LIVE FROM LA, a youth-led theatre production created by twelve young people ages 13-19.
Created with: @streetpoetsinc @theunusualsus @versastylela @noeasypropsorg
Together, the fellows designed and built the projection system used in the performance, allowing the students to create digital collages drawn from their own families and neighborhoods. These images were projected across the stage as part of the play the youth wrote and performed themselves.
The project demonstrates how creative coding can become a collaborative tool for storytelling, enabling communities to shape the technological systems that amplify their voices.
Learn more about the project: https://medium.com/@ProcessingOrg/call-code-response-92918629f555
(also 🔗 in bio)
The Future Protest, by Maryam Kazeem and Jubril Olambiwonnu, explores how environmental loss can be recorded through sound, memory, and code.
The project responds to the ongoing ecological erasure of the Lagos Lagoon in Nigeria. Participants are invited to record a “future protest,” imagining a different relationship between the city and its disappearing waters. A custom algorithm then analyzes the recording, transforming moments of silence into speculative 3D mangrove trees generated from digital models of plastic currently found in the lagoon.
The resulting archive treats absence itself as a form of data. Through creative coding and participatory storytelling, the project creates a space where imagining environmental futures becomes an act of collective reflection and resistance.
Learn more about the project: https://medium.com/@ProcessingOrg/the-silence-in-the-glitch-e00788e80b28
(also 🔗 in bio)
In p5.score, artist and choreographer Kate Sicchio explores how code can become a partner in improvisational dance.
Developed through the 2025 Processing Foundation Fellowship, Kate created p5.score, a JavaScript library that connects the logic of p5.js with the physical language of choreography. The system allows visual patterns generated in code to function as prompts for dancers, creating a framework where movement emerges through an ongoing dialogue between body and algorithm.
Designed as an entry point for choreographers and dancers interested in creative coding, p5.score opens new possibilities for collaborative experimentation between performers and technologists.
Learn more about the project: https://medium.com/@ProcessingOrg/negotiating-the-movement-9f402ed68a18
(also 🔗 in bio)
Mexico City was built on five lakes. Today, most traces of them have disappeared.
In ‘Where Has the Lake Gone?’, artist Leonardo Aranda investigates the hidden hydrological history of the city. Using a bicycle disguised as a tamale cart, Leonardo traveled through neighborhoods scanning the ground with a custom radar sensor, searching for remnants of buried waterways.
The collected data became a 3D map built in Processing, revealing fragments of the lake system still embedded in the city’s infrastructure: curved streets, too-high staircases, and underground channels.
The project asks how we might reconnect with a landscape that urban development has largely erased.
Learn more about the project: https://medium.com/@ProcessingOrg/where-has-the-lake-gone-df42cb148874
(also 🔗 in bio)
In Body as Data, artist and developer Daniel Corbani explores how movement can shape digital space.
Using his open-source Processing library Luna, Daniel created a system that allows performers to interact with generative visuals through their bodies. In collaboration with dancer Paola Higa, movement becomes the source of the imagery itself: fluid simulations emerging in real time from the performer’s gestures.
Daniel released Luna as open-source software so artists and performers without access to expensive commercial tools can work with projection and creative coding. The project reflects a growing interest among artists in developing accessible technological tools for performance and experimentation.
Learn more about the project: https://medium.com/@ProcessingOrg/body-as-data-df9526ef4107
(also 🔗 in bio)
The Network Gong Ensemble Archive by elekhlekha explores how sound can carry cultural memory across borders.
Developed through the Processing Foundation Fellowship, this project documents Southeast Asian gong traditions through oral histories encapsulated in interactive p5.js sketches. Musicians from the Phillipines, Myanmar, and Thailand contribute recordings of similar instruments across different cultural contexts, revealing the deep connections that exist across these musical lineages.
Rather than treating archives as static collections, the project invites visitors to engage with the materials as a living ensemble. It is meant to be played and shared.
Learn more about the project: https://medium.com/@ProcessingOrg/the-sound-of-the-day-c5a112054210
(also 🔗 in bio)
Der Instagram Story Viewer ist ein einfaches Tool, mit dem Sie Instagram Stories, Videos, Fotos oder IGTV heimlich ansehen und speichern können. Mit diesem Service können Sie Inhalte herunterladen und offline genießen, wann immer Sie möchten. Wenn Sie etwas Interessantes auf Instagram finden, das Sie später überprüfen möchten, oder Stories anonym ansehen möchten, ist unser Viewer ideal für Sie. Anonstories bietet eine ausgezeichnete Lösung, um Ihre Identität zu schützen. Instagram hat die Stories-Funktion erstmals im August 2023 eingeführt, die schnell auch von anderen Plattformen übernommen wurde, dank ihres fesselnden, zeitlich begrenzten Formats. Stories ermöglichen es Nutzern, schnelle Updates zu teilen, sei es Fotos, Videos oder Selfies, ergänzt durch Text, Emojis oder Filter, und sind nur 24 Stunden lang sichtbar. Dieser begrenzte Zeitrahmen sorgt für eine hohe Interaktion im Vergleich zu regulären Posts. Heutzutage sind Stories eine der beliebtesten Methoden, um sich in sozialen Medien zu verbinden und zu kommunizieren. Wenn Sie jedoch eine Story ansehen, kann der Ersteller Ihren Namen in seiner Viewer-Liste sehen, was ein Problem für die Privatsphäre sein kann. Was ist, wenn Sie Stories durchsuchen möchten, ohne bemerkt zu werden? Hier wird Anonstories nützlich. Es ermöglicht Ihnen, öffentliche Instagram-Inhalte anzusehen, ohne Ihre Identität preiszugeben. Geben Sie einfach den Benutzernamen des Profils ein, das Sie interessiert, und das Tool zeigt dessen neueste Stories an. Funktionen des Anonstories Viewers: - Anonymes Browsen: Sehen Sie Stories, ohne in der Viewer-Liste zu erscheinen. - Kein Konto erforderlich: Sehen Sie öffentliche Inhalte, ohne ein Instagram-Konto zu erstellen. - Inhalte herunterladen: Speichern Sie beliebige Story-Inhalte direkt auf Ihrem Gerät für die Offline-Nutzung. - Highlights anzeigen: Greifen Sie auf Instagram-Highlights zu, auch über das 24-Stunden-Fenster hinaus. - Repost-Überwachung: Verfolgen Sie Reposts oder Interaktionen bei Stories für persönliche Profile. Einschränkungen: - Dieses Tool funktioniert nur mit öffentlichen Accounts; private Accounts bleiben unzugänglich. Vorteile: - Datenschutzfreundlich: Sehen Sie sich beliebige Instagram-Inhalte an, ohne bemerkt zu werden. - Einfach und unkompliziert: Keine App-Installation oder Registrierung erforderlich. - Exklusive Tools: Laden Sie Inhalte herunter und verwalten Sie sie auf eine Weise, die Instagram nicht bietet.
Behalten Sie Instagram-Updates diskret im Blick, schützen Sie Ihre Privatsphäre und bleiben Sie anonym.
Sehen Sie Profile und Fotos anonym an, ganz einfach mit dem Private Profile Viewer.
Dieses kostenlose Tool ermöglicht es Ihnen, Instagram Stories anonym anzusehen und dabei Ihre Aktivität vor dem Story-Ersteller zu verbergen.
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Priorisiert sicheres, anonymes Browsen, ohne Login-Daten zu benötigen.
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Der Dienst ist kostenlos nutzbar.
Inhalte von privaten Accounts sind nur für Follower zugänglich.
Dateien sind nur für persönliche oder Bildungszwecke und müssen Urheberrechtsregeln entsprechen.
Geben Sie einen öffentlichen Benutzernamen ein, um Stories anzusehen oder herunterzuladen. Der Dienst generiert direkte Links, um Inhalte lokal zu speichern.