Tuesday 16 June 2015

My final animation, for now!



Above is my finished and final animation, for the year. To be honest this years' piece is not my best fare, I would be inclined as to say it was my worst, this is mainly due to a delay in the planning of it. If I had more time, then this animation would be more closer to what I had already storyboarded.
My storyboard.


How did I make him?
I decided to make him out plasticine: I mixed together some plasticine to make the flesh colour of Mickeys' face, made two concave shapes for the ears, made his facial features by rolling out three tiny dots of black plasticine (nose and pupils) and two white ovals. I made the choice to flatten him as an experiment to see how Aardman animated "Rex the runt." I made the Juggling Balls by rolling plasticine into a ball shape.

What equipment did I use?
I used a hue hd webcam as my camera,

iStopmotion and iMovie to animate and edit (respectively).
iStopmotion

To animate my version of a certain mouse, I only moved whichever part I was animating about a millimetre at a time and then took a shot from the camera and repeated this process until I had about ten seconds of footage, in iStopmotion.

iMovie
In iMovie, I imported the finished animation and soundtrack onto the timeline and added the titles and credits.
Padlet link:

http://padlet.com/pinkieguy690/ee6zrs8aax3e

Here are some responses from a few of my peers.



Thursday 21 May 2015

Storyboard.


This is the storyboard of my animation.

Equipment and prop list.

Equipment list:

  • Plasticine (Black, Blue, White and Red).
  • Hue camera (1).
  • Black shoe lace (1).
  • Lego pieces (Black, Grey, White) approx 50 pieces.

Prop list:

  • Car battery (built out of lego).
  • Table.
  • Gothic background (printed).

Thursday 14 May 2015

animation ideas.

Looking into new ideas for my animation, Below are some examples of what type of narrative I would love to create for my own animation.

What I like about this short is the fact that it shows wild and gothic imagination of Tim Burton.
An idea for my animation could be: Minnie Mouse, Bride of Mickeystein is pull together the gothicness of Tim Burton and the saccharine image of Disney.


Trailer #1
Frankenstein — MOVIECLIPS.com

Thursday 23 April 2015

Navigation.

Persistence of vision.






Early animation devices.

Zoetrope:

This is a pre-animation device, which produces the illusion of movement by displaying a sequence of drawings or photographs showing the progressive phases of movement, E.D: a child kicking a football.

Mutoscope:

Also known as "what the butler saw" machines, due to depicting: rude, lewd and risque situations, and images. They were a pre-motion picture device that worked on the same principle of a flip-book, operated via a hand crank.

Kinetoscope:

The kinetoscope was an early motion-picture exhibition device which introduced the basic approach to cinematic projection, which was used up until the advent of video.


Persistence of vision.

What is persistence of vision?

Persistence of vision is the illusion of movement using slightly different shots.

A good example of this would be if i animated a character of mine waving.

First shot would be the character preparing to wave. second shot, The character would start to wave. Each frame will be slightly from the previous in the movement of the characters' hand, depending upon fast or slow my character is moving will impact on how many frames will need to be used, i.e: if the character is slowly waving then that will use more frames. However, if my character was waving quickly then less frames will be needed.