I was pitched a brief, by a company, based on an pro-NHS campaign. They wanted me to come up with some ideas on how to animate the script they'd written.
I sent a written treatment and they requested some style boards for further consideration.
Below are my rough designs (they wanted a specific style):
Showing posts with label figures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label figures. Show all posts
Saturday, 4 April 2015
Wednesday, 1 October 2014
Tiny Twelve
It has been some time since I've heard from the company that requested this test commission, so I'm assuming I have not been selected.
To that end, I am publishing my design.
It's a likeness of Peter Capaldi (in costume as the Twelfth Doctor) in the established style of the company. I'm quite pleased with it, even if they obviously feel it's not enough to hire me over.
To that end, I am publishing my design.
It's a likeness of Peter Capaldi (in costume as the Twelfth Doctor) in the established style of the company. I'm quite pleased with it, even if they obviously feel it's not enough to hire me over.
Labels:
brief,
celebrity,
clothes,
commission,
design,
Doctor Who,
drawing,
faces,
figures,
graphic design,
illustration,
people,
Peter Capaldi,
portraits,
vector,
work
Thursday, 18 September 2014
Sibling
An offhand comment on Twitter lead me to draw this stupid portrait of my brother.
It's not perfect, and you can tell I put more time into the face than anything else, but it's a good exercise in digital drawing.
It's not perfect, and you can tell I put more time into the face than anything else, but it's a good exercise in digital drawing.
Wednesday, 9 July 2014
Comical
Inspired by a project called Twitter The Comic, wherein a group of artists illustrate selected tweets and turn them into short strips, I have decided to practice my comicbook illustration by producing fully-fledged comic pages based on tweets I find amusing.
Below are some preliminary sketches based on two tweets I saw today.
I'll post more when I've collated some finished pages.
Below are some preliminary sketches based on two tweets I saw today.
I'll post more when I've collated some finished pages.
Sunday, 29 June 2014
Book It
I just finished the final touches to my "Gilliam Animation", which I've tentatively titled Book - for want of a better name - and uploaded to Vimeo.
(You can see it here.)
It's taken me far too long to complete, what with laziness, tedium, losing a load of work and being put off and having to find the right live-action elements to include. But it's done.
It's almost ironic that the part of the process I knew the least about and had never attempted before, took me the least amount of time. I started this morning and finished a short while ago. (That was compositing the animation with the live footage of the book.)
I think it worked out well too, considering I took the lazy approach and avoided using After Effects and masks - instead winging it with the limited effects in Premiere and a prayer that the clumsy edits won't be noticeable during viewing. (I don't think they are.)
I'm actually incredibly pleased with how it's come out. Especially how well I managed to make digitally animated scans, combined with footage of a blank page, look like closeup shots of an actual book.
It was challenging given the inconsistent colouring of a lot of the source images (that I probably should've corrected at the first stage rather than last) and I ended up using a lot more and far different effects than I imagined when I first conceptualised it.
In particular not being able to chroma key the image backgrounds and having to add digital shadows to mimic those of the page-turn to make them more seamless.
Below are some screenshots to pique your interest/allow me to show off.
(You can see it here.)
It's taken me far too long to complete, what with laziness, tedium, losing a load of work and being put off and having to find the right live-action elements to include. But it's done.
It's almost ironic that the part of the process I knew the least about and had never attempted before, took me the least amount of time. I started this morning and finished a short while ago. (That was compositing the animation with the live footage of the book.)
I think it worked out well too, considering I took the lazy approach and avoided using After Effects and masks - instead winging it with the limited effects in Premiere and a prayer that the clumsy edits won't be noticeable during viewing. (I don't think they are.)
I'm actually incredibly pleased with how it's come out. Especially how well I managed to make digitally animated scans, combined with footage of a blank page, look like closeup shots of an actual book.
It was challenging given the inconsistent colouring of a lot of the source images (that I probably should've corrected at the first stage rather than last) and I ended up using a lot more and far different effects than I imagined when I first conceptualised it.
In particular not being able to chroma key the image backgrounds and having to add digital shadows to mimic those of the page-turn to make them more seamless.
Below are some screenshots to pique your interest/allow me to show off.
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I had to write a load of nonsense to make the scenes look more like real book pages. They're not even complete sentences; there's nothing before the left edge of the shot. |
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I'm not going to pretend that I don't think I'm a genius for adding a layer of mirrored text to emulate the look of the adjoining page showing through the paper. |
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I think the overall effect is convincing. I'd believe this is a photo of a book page, and I KNOW that I made it. |
Labels:
animation,
Book,
British Library,
competition,
drawing,
faces,
figures,
illustration,
images,
personal,
public,
public domain,
Terry Gilliam,
video,
vimeo
Thursday, 26 June 2014
Machinations
In my last post, I mentioned my film The Machine.
It's a dark animated short based on Franz Kafka's story "In The Penal Colony".
There is a complete version of it, that I have submitted to festivals, but I personally think it's too short and unfinished (the time constraints of uni, necessitated severe edits to the script).
At the moment I wish to extend it to the level I think is the bear minimum for release, and then hopefully add a little more until it is "properly" finished - at which point I'll release it again as a "director's cut".
Just so you know what it's like and it exists (many people haven't seen it) here are some screenshots I've taken at various points of production.
It's a dark animated short based on Franz Kafka's story "In The Penal Colony".
There is a complete version of it, that I have submitted to festivals, but I personally think it's too short and unfinished (the time constraints of uni, necessitated severe edits to the script).
At the moment I wish to extend it to the level I think is the bear minimum for release, and then hopefully add a little more until it is "properly" finished - at which point I'll release it again as a "director's cut".
Just so you know what it's like and it exists (many people haven't seen it) here are some screenshots I've taken at various points of production.
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An exasperating issue I noticed during early stages, that I posted on Twitter. |
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B&W screenshots as part of the festival submission. |
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The submission also required a poster, so this is a rough design I threw together to fulfil that demand. |
Saturday, 19 April 2014
Faces in Places
I've been doing a fair bit of travelling recently; taking my sketchbook about with me to practice sketching during my downtime. I realise now why there's so prevalent a cliché of illustrators drawing on trains.
Sleeping woman on a train to Birmingham |
The challenge is getting faces without people noticing you staring at them. Easier when they're further away, but harder to see details. |
Workmen on a break outside the station |
Travellers waiting at the station |
Figures on the left were on a train, chap at the top in a cafe. |
Saturday, 15 March 2014
A Foot Note
I drew this critter on a whim, late last night.
I noticed his hands and feet were quite catastrophic. I've been meaning to work on my hand and feet drawings (it's something a lot of people struggle with) so I started doing studies from image and live references.
I noticed his hands and feet were quite catastrophic. I've been meaning to work on my hand and feet drawings (it's something a lot of people struggle with) so I started doing studies from image and live references.
Tuesday, 28 January 2014
Terry-ble at updating
I've been working for some time, on-and-off, on this silly little competition project. But I've been very bad at keeping anyone updated on its progress. There came a few stalls when I had some crashes and lost a lot of work - and some of it can get quite tedious to animate, so it's very demotivating to lose it. Additionally, I also intend to splice in some live action footage of an old book. Finding the right book for the job also hindered progress, but I have something now.
Here are a few images to show what caught my eye in the British Library's collection and illustrate the work I did to make them "animateable".
Here are a few images to show what caught my eye in the British Library's collection and illustrate the work I did to make them "animateable".
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This, I believe, is the original, unedited version of this image that I downloaded. |
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Here you can see the edits I made to the base image itself... |
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...and this shows the embellishments and extra elements I added to animate the image. |
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Another of the images that caught my eye. |
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Side-by-side comparison of the original (right) and the edited version, with cut out elements in the centre. |
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Still of one live-action book shots, onto which I intend to superimpose the animations. |
Friday, 17 February 2012
My Winter In April
A group project I worked on with Dan Farmer and Julia Konieczna. Based on Shakespeare's Sonnet No. 98.
From you have I been absent in the spring,There was deep compromise on many factors, given the three different schools of thought that went into producing this, but I'm not unhappy with the final result. I may return to the project to realise my own interpretation, though.
When proud pied April, dressed in all his trim,
Hath put a spirit of youth in every thing,
That heavy Saturn laughed and leapt with him.
Yet nor the lays of birds, nor the sweet smell
Of different flowers in odour and in hue,
Could make me any summer's story tell,
Or from their proud lap pluck them where they grew:
Nor did I wonder at the lily's white,
Nor praise the deep vermilion in the rose;
They were but sweet, but figures of delight,
Drawn after you, you pattern of all those.
Yet seemed it winter still, and you away,
As with your shadow I with these did play.
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