Thursday 26 April 2012

Evaluation of my animation

I am overall really happy with the way that my animation project went, i changed my idea a few times from using plastersene to using myself and a handful of coins. Using the coins in my animation was easy and very enjoyable, the only difficulties i experienced were when i was required to balance the coins on top of each other as they gradually stack up on themselves, on a few occasions the tower of coins toppled over so i had to restart the animation.


Also adding the titles and credits to my animation was quite difficult as that was the first time i have ever had experience using the programme. I found adding the sound very easy and fun finding a piece of media to go with my video.

I have had a couple of comments from my class mates and the feedback i got was very positive, i am really pleased that my class mates are impressed with my work. The only changes i would make to my overall project would to maybe make the animation a little bit longer but other than that everything went great.

Thursday 19 April 2012

To add the sound to my animation i added my movie into the garage band application and added my soundtrack. I then cut the part of my soundtrack that i am going to use. I then faded the music in at the start of the animation and faded it out towards the end as the credits are rolling.

My finished animation !!!




This is my finished animation with opening title, end credits and a soundtrack that i thought suited it. I experimented with some of the different style of text and transitions that are readily available for use in i movie. I chose the opening titles that started the same time as the animation and fade in and out at the start of the animation. I chose some basic end credits as the animation fades out to a black back ground and the text fades in and out.

Thursday 22 March 2012

Animation timeline


1832 The Phenakistoscope, an early optical toy invented by Joseph Plateau, lets viewers see moving horses or acrobats.
1892 The 500-frame Pauvre Pierrot is presented by Emile Reynaud in the Musée Grevin, Paris.
1899 Britain's Arthur Melbourne uses stop-motion to animate matches for the commercial Matches: An Appeal.
1900 English-born cartoonist James Stuart Blackton uses stop-motion trickery to turn sketches into objects in Enchanted Drawings.
1907 Edwin S. Porter uses stop-motion dolls in The Teddy Bears.
1913 John Randolph Bray, responsible for refining the animation process, makes Colonel Heeza Liar in Africa, featuring the first cartoon series character.
1918 Winsor McCay makes The Sinking of the Lusitania, a furious condemnation of the tragedy.
1922 Disney's first entry into fairytales (albeit in heavily changed versions): Red Riding Hood, Puss in Boots and others are created by his Laugh-O-Gram company.
1925 Willis O'Brien's stop-motion dinosaurs star in the feature The Lost World, which climaxes with a brontosaurus rampaging through London.
1929 First Disney Silly Symphony cartoon, The Skeleton Dance, animated entirely by Disney's partner Ub Iwerks.
1934 First appearance of Donald Duck as a supporting character in Disney's The Wise Little Hen. His first words are, “Who? Me? Oh no, I've got a bellyache.”
1937 Disney releases Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. First appearance of Daffy Duck in Porky's Duck Hunt. In Scotland, the pioneer abstract animator Norman McLaren makes Love on the Wing, but the film is banned because of fleeting phallic imagery.
1940 Disney releases Pinocchio and Fantasia; both flop. William Hanna and Joseph Barbera make the first Tom and Jerry cartoon, Puss Gets the Boot (though Tom is called Jasper in the film). Over the next 12 years, seven Tom and Jerry films win Oscars.
1945 Japan's first animated feature, Momotaro's Divine Sea Warriors, shows Asia liberated by heroic Japanese animals. It opens weeks before Japan's defeat. Release of Garbancito of La Mancha, the first Spanish cartoon feature.
1950 Disney releases Cinderella, its first major cartoon feature for eight years. At the other end of the production scale, Crusader Rabbit is the first cartoon for US television, though it has extremely limited movement.
1953 The Shepherdess and the Sweep (also known as The Adventures of Mr Wonderbird), a fairytale fantasy, is released in France but disowned as unfinished by its director Paul Grimault. A revised version is released in 1980 as the acclaimed The King and the Bird. Norman McLaren makes the Oscar-winning Neighbours, in which human actors are animated in a form of stop-motion called pixilation. Chuck Jones makes the self-referential Merrie Melodies classic Duck Amuck.
1960 Television debut of The Flintstones, created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, and of the Christian stop-motion series Davey and Goliath.
1968 George Dunning directs the Beatles' animated feature Yellow Submarine. In Japan, Isao Takahata directs the feature The Adventure of Hols, Prince of the Sun, known in the west as The Little Norse Prince. Early production on Richard Williams' feature later known as The Thief and the Cobbler, which will be in and out of production for more than 20 years and never finished except in travesties by other hands.
1973 René Laloux makes the French SF animation Fantastic Planet, winning the Grand Prize at Cannes. The Hungarian studio Pannonia produces the children's feature Hugo the Hippo.
1980 The feature Nezha Conquers the Dragon King is taken as a sign of the revival of Chinese animation, recovering from the Cultural Revolution.
1984 Walt Disney's nephew Roy E. Disney sparks a corporate war with his uncle's company, bringing in a new regime led by ex-Paramount men Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg. Eisner reportedly wants to close the animation department, but Roy E. Disney elects to become its new head.
1989 Wallace and Gromit debut in Nick Park's A Grand Day Out, losing at the Oscars to Park's Creature Comforts. The Little Mermaid signals a revival in Disney animation. The Simpsons gain its own series, starting with a Christmas special.
1994 Disney's The Lion King becomes the highest-grossing traditionally animated feature, not taking into account inflation. Jeffrey Katzenberg, now closely involved with the studio's animation, quarrels with Michael Eisner and leaves to co-found DreamWorks.
1995 John Lasseter's Toy Story is the world's first feature-length CGI cartoon, heralding the biggest animation revolution since Steamboat Willie. In Japan, Mamoru Oshii's feature Ghost in the Shell and Hideaki Anno's TV series Neon Genesis Evangelion, both SF animations, become international hits. Britain's Dave Borthwick directs the dark, pixilated feature The Secret Adventures of Tom Thumb, while Nick Park's The Wrong Trousers wins an Oscar.
2000 Aardman releases its first feature film, Chicken Run, in partnership with DreamWorks. Disney's Dinosaur, an expensive attempt to merge CGI and live action, is a commercial disappointment, while Fox's Titan A.E., a space adventure directed by Don Bluth, flops.
2002 The Two Towers, the second part of Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy, introduces Gollum, a CGI character whose movements and expressions are based on actor Andy Serkis. The Blue Sky studio becomes a successful CGI player with Ice Age. Disney's semi-traditional animation Treasure Planet flops disastrously.
2005 The return of stop-motion, with Tim Burton's The Corpse Bride and Wallace and Gromit The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, by Nick Park and Steve Box. The latter wins an Oscar. Chicken Little, Disney's first in-house CGI film since Dinosaur, has a lukewarm reception.

Thursday 1 March 2012

Coin animation


Coin from Olly Newport on Vimeo.

This is an animation of coins by Olly Newport that i found on Vimeo.

I really like this animation as it doesnt require many resources just a handful of coins. I think this would be a really simple and effective animation as i can alot of different movements in the animation and even incoroprate myself into the animation. I was maybe thinking about calling the video coin magic and "performing" different magic tricks with the coins for example hitting a 50p piece with my hand and it shatters into lots of smaller coins or even making the coin move as if im pushing it with my hand and so on. I will try all of these different ideas and put them together to see if they work.

Thursday 23 February 2012

An idea for my animation


Trapt-Stay Alive from dms.FM on Vimeo.

In this music video there is model based animation using modelling clay transofrming into a character after under going lots of different forms.

Thursday 9 February 2012

Idea for animation project


Destek Türev Claymation 2010 - I from Dirty Cheap Creative on Vimeo.
This is a video made by Dirty cheap creative from the Destek Turev Claymation 2010 that i found on vimeo. I am going to use this video as inspiration as i like the idea of it and the way it shows you him sculpting the different models and them then coming to life and fighting each other.