Thursday, 24 November 2011
Example of animation with sound
Popeye the Sailor Man - Insect to Injury by funnycatsclips
I like Popeye because the sound effects are good and the music put in with it makes it exciting and Popeyes voice is funny.
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Elf Outer-Space
Our final clip with title and credits.
To add the title and credits we use imovie. To add a title or credits you click the T bottom then you pick which style you like best then you drag it before your video for your title and for credits you drag it after your video. Then you click were the title's going to be and type it in then to change the font you go to text at the top then it would say show fonts then you pick the font color size etc... .
Thursday, 10 November 2011
Model based animation
This is an example of model based animation.
The Pingu Show - Title Sequence from Jamie Kennerley on Vimeo.
The Pingu Show - Title Sequence from Jamie Kennerley on Vimeo.
This is our model based animation
By: Fareeda, Ashleigh and Jake Bromby
We first made our own models with plasticine, then we made the short cartoon on istopmotion for a few seconds.
Thursday, 3 November 2011
Cell Animation
Cell animation is the oldest kind of animation. It's when each frame is drawn separately on sheets of transparent plastic. Usually they use colored pencils to draw and color the animation for each frame separately.
Tom and Jerry Cartoon Ep.1 - Puss Gets the Boot... by singedtentacle
Tom and Jerry Cartoon Ep.1 - Puss Gets the Boot... by singedtentacle
Thursday, 20 October 2011
PIXELATION
Pixilation from MARIO FIGUEROA on Vimeo.
Pixelation is a technique to create film where peoples movements are made to look like artificial animations.
Our own pixelation: by: Fareeda, Ashleigh, James, Josie
Starring: James, Josie
Untitled from kevin trundley on Vimeo.
Thursday, 13 October 2011
Mine and Ashleighs cut out animation
we cut out some pictures out of magazines and then we took the pictures to make our cut out animation.
we took the girls from the diet coke advert and the cow from a milk advert. the program we used was the istopmotion.
we took the girls from the diet coke advert and the cow from a milk advert. the program we used was the istopmotion.
Thursday, 29 September 2011
Cut out animation
Dead All Along || Ceri Frost from Giles Timms on Vimeo.
Cut out animation is a technique for making animation which uses images which are cut out of magazines or made out of materials, clay and etc...
Thursday, 22 September 2011
time laps animation
Primary Research: Also known as field research is when u collect information that doesn't already exist which is research to collect original data.
Secondary Research: Also known as desk research is when the information already exists in some form, having been collected for some other purpose.
Time laps: When you take a set of frames in a small amount of time, that when shown fast or at normal speed the action seems much faster.
What we produced was all random it was just Thomas and chris and tom making faces and moving in circles in front of the camera . We used the software Istopmotion to make it and the film was only 30 seconds long because it's the first time we used it.
Untitled from Timothy Hodgson on Vimeo.
Tchaikovsky Timelapse from joe clarke on Vimeo.
Secondary Research: Also known as desk research is when the information already exists in some form, having been collected for some other purpose.
Time laps: When you take a set of frames in a small amount of time, that when shown fast or at normal speed the action seems much faster.
What we produced was all random it was just Thomas and chris and tom making faces and moving in circles in front of the camera . We used the software Istopmotion to make it and the film was only 30 seconds long because it's the first time we used it.
I worked with Tim, Thomas and chris.
Untitled from Timothy Hodgson on Vimeo.
Tchaikovsky Timelapse from joe clarke on Vimeo.
Thursday, 15 September 2011
persistence of vision
Persistence of vision means that the human eye keeps images for around 0.04 seconds, which means seeing 15 or more images per second makes the illusion of full motion.
Paul Nipkow developed the first true television device in 1884. The device consists of a scanning disk, lenses, mirrors, a selenium cell, and electrical conductors.
The Persistent Resistance of Vision from James Baker on Vimeo.
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