Friday, 18 November 2011

Lemon Jelly





The Shouty Track is a single from the Lemon Jelly album, the video is created using animation in the style of a flip book. The style of this video is for it to look as if the animations had been drawn on the paper, but they are actually computer generated, the lined paper background is also computer generated and is animated to look as it is moving. Just from the rhythm of the animation you hear the rhythm of the song, they have thought about what the animation should be doing and to what part of the song and then repeated for the chorus and so on.
I think the video works great with the song as it's completely random, but good fun too watch. 

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Filming the limerick


Stop motion is where you take a picture every time you move the object.  

To film this animation we set up the camera using a tripod, directly above the A3 sheet of paper, we had the camera connected to the laptop using a cable so that we could use the programme iStop Motion to take picture of each movement. Instead of adding the credits in digitally, we drew the out on pieces of card and used the stop motion to add them in to the end of our animation.  After taking all the pictures to create the animation we imported all the pictures into Final Cut where Leanne edited the video. While Leanne was editing the animation video, the rest of the group and I thought we should start recording the audio sounds for the animation. We made a list of all the sounds we would need and then we went into another room to record them, when we were happy with the audio sounds we gave them to Leanne on a memory stick to import into Final Cut and then edit into the video. 






Monday, 7 November 2011

Limerick Cut Out Animation

For this task we were in groups, In my group there was Ita, Sophie, Sunny, Christian Leanne and I. We were told to pick a limerick and then to create a animation for our chosen limerick. We had to create the limerick out of cut outs we had drawn coloured and cut out, we had a piece of A3 card to design for our back ground.  The limerick we chose was:




 
There once was a boy named John
He owned a 50 Dollar bond
He felt so lucky, he bought a big rubber Ducky

And now his money is all gone



Before we could start we had to think of a storyboard for our limerick. 
Here's Sophie and Ita working on a story board and there's me in the bottom right corner working on the other story board.
The story we came up with is that John would be standing in his living room holding some money, the money then explodes and a massive rubber duck falls from the sky, then there is a bug flood and John is riding the duck, the flood then disappears and so does the duck, he is then left with neither his duck nor his money. 
Once we had sorted the story and finished the story board we all started to draw and colour the items, the set would be John's living rooms, so we needed the basics such as; a sofa, window, curtains, picture frame. We printed out a 70's style background for the wallpaper and then we stuck everything else on top. 
Stop motion is where you take a picture every time you move the object.  
To film this animation we set up the camera using a tripod, directly above the A3 sheet of paper, we had the camera connected to the laptop using a cable so that we could use stop motion to take picture of each movement. 













SUMO SCIENCE

 
Ed Patterson & Will Studd are an award winning directing duo specializing in different forms of animation. Together they are Sumo Science, their aim is to create a fresh mix of styles using elements of stop-motion, puppetry, 2D and live-action. 
They are currently represented by Aardman Animations and have directed a range of commercials for clients such as Innocent Orange Juice, Weetabix, KP, Hellmans and Nokia.
'Gulp' is a short film created by Sumo Science at Aardman, depicting a fisherman going about his daily catch. The animation was shot on location at Pendine Beach in South Wales, every frame of this stop-motion animation was shot using a Nokia N8, with its 12 megapixel camera and Carl Zeiss optics. The film has broken a world record for the 'largest stop-motion animation set', with the largest scene stretching over 11,000 square feet. 
This is how they made "Gulp"


Their biggest success to date is for Nokia with the film 'Dot.' The spot went on to win 15 major advertising awards as well as claiming a Guiness World Record for the smallest stop-motion character in a film. It has become a huge success online with nearly 3 million hits. 

Here is the making of "Dot":

Sunday, 6 November 2011

Box Animation

The task we got set was to create an animation from the object we were given. In the group I was in with Sophie, Ita and Christian the objects we were given were marbles. We all came up with a few ideas of what we could do with the marbles and we also had to include the box they came in. We decided that we would make the lid shuffle off the top, and then get the biggest marble to look like it pushes the box over, we also drew faces on the marbles to give it some humor. We then had all the small marble roll out of shot and then all roll back into shot, they then roll back into the box and the biggest marble which is still out then shrinks and rolls back into the box the lid then shuffles its way back on top of the box.


Marble Animation - Group 1 from Long Road Applied Media Diploma on Vimeo.


We then had to think about the audio, we watched the video back and then listed all the noises we would need, we then all took it in turns to make each noise to see who sounded best. these were the sounds we needed: 
Lid popping off.
Lid scraping across the table.
Big marble rolling on the table.
Small marble rolling.
Multiple marbles rolling.
Squeaky marble voice.
Popping noise.
Marbles shaking.
Yum sounds.
Mooing sound.
Marble box rustling.

But unfortunately after the video had been edited it was to short and we couldn't use all the sounds we recorded. 

Friday, 4 November 2011

Jan Svankmajer Practitioner Study

Jan Svankmajer is a Czech filmmaker and artist who was born in Prague 1934 and he still lives there today. He studied at the Institute of Applied Arts from 1950 to 1954 and then at the Prague Academy of Performing Arts (Department of Puppetry). Svankmajer made his first film in 1964 "The Last Trick" for over thirty years Svankmajer has made some of the most memorable and unique animated films ever made, gaining a reputation as one of the world's foremost animators, and influencing filmmakers from Tim Burton to The Brothers Quay, But he has also gained reputation for his distinctive technique of the use of Stop Motion. He could create surreal, nightmarish but somehow funny films.  Stop-motion features in most of his work, though recently his feature films have included much more live action sequences than animation. Many of Svankmajer's films feature clay objects coming to life using Stop Motion, as you can see in his animation Darkness Light Darkeness: