Schlagwort: animation

  • Go sailing with this stop-motion 3D-printed boat

    Go sailing with this stop-motion 3D-printed boat

    Reading Time: 2 minutes

    Shot on a Raspberry Pi Camera Module, this stop-motion sequence is made up of 180 photos that took two hours to shoot and another hour to process.

    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hsdIEe-0gNw]

    The trick lies in the Camera Module enabling you to change the alpha transparency of the overlay image, which is the previous frame. It’s all explained in the official documentation, but basically, the Camera Module’s preview permits multiple layers to be rendered simultaneously: text, image, etc. Being able to change the transparency from the command line means this maker could see how the next frame (or the object) should be aligned. In 2D animation, this process is called ‘onion skinning’.

    You can see the Raspberry Pi Camera Module on the bottom left in front of Yuksel’s hand

    So why the Raspberry Pi Camera Module? Redditor /DIY_Maxwell aka Yuksel Temiz explains: “I make stop-motion animations as a hobby, using either my SLR or phone with a remote shutter. In most cases I didn’t need precision, but some animations like this are very challenging because I need to know the exact position of my object (the boat in this case) in each frame. The Raspberry Pi camera was great because I could overlay the previously captured frame into the live preview, and I could quickly change the transparency of the overlay to see how precise the location and how smooth the motion.”

    Stringing!!! 🙂 … these are actual prints, Ender 3 Pro’s horse-to-horse reproducibility is pretty good. from r/3Dprinting

    You can easily make simple, linear stop-motion videos by just capturing your 3D printer while it’s doing its thing. Yuksel created a bolting horse (above) in that way. The boat sequence was more complicated though, because it rotates, and because pieces had to be added and removed.

    The official docs are really comprehensive and span basic to advanced skill levels. Yuksel even walks you through getting started with the installation of Raspberry Pi OS.

    Yuksel’s Raspberry Pi + Lego microscope

    We’ve seen Yuksel’s handiwork before, and this new project was made in part by modifying the code from the open-source microscope (above) they made using Raspberry Pi and LEGO. They’re now planning to make a nice GUI and share the project as an open-source stop-motion animation tool.

    Website: LINK

  • Gloomy Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose – A Chat with Developer Atlas V

    Gloomy Eyes, Full Hearts, Can’t Lose – A Chat with Developer Atlas V

    Reading Time: 8 minutes

    The third and final chapter of the charming and heartfelt animated experience Gloomy Eyes is now available exclusively on Viveport Infinity. Narrated by Colin Farrell, it tells the heartwarming yet bittersweet story of star crossed young love that transcends life and death. With wonderfully expressive animation and innovative VR enabled storytelling techniques, it will make you smile as much as it will bring a tear to your eyes (be sure to wipe down those lenses after). 

    We sat down to chat with the team behind this award winning tale to learn what inspired them to craft this stylish VR yarn.

    Interview by Nathan Allen Ortega, Viveport Staff

    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocuZoLnmoeE?feature=oembed&wmode=opaque&w=730&h=411]

    Tell us a bit about yourself and development team behind Gloomy Eyes

    Jorge Tereso / Director: We’ve been working together for many years and we have always prioritized pleasure and enjoyment of the day to day process that is doing animation. 

    Fernando Maldonado / Director: For many years we worked with different clients but we’ve always kept our sacred fire, a kind of engine that encouraged us to go for our own goals and content. These was a key motivation for our artistic concerns. What we do is a result of a very hard work and allowing us to play, up to the end, to move forward to the point we really want to reach. This freedom and playful spirit made us achieve many important goals. The whole team play this game, have fun and help us to get to  incredible results, probably that we couldn’t reach by our own.

    Gloomy Eyes tells a story of a world circa 1980s where humans and the undead attempt to live side by side – relatively unsuccessfully. What were the main sources of inspiration on this nostalgic, fantastical tale of young love blooming among the darkness?

    Fernando: We wanted to create a timeless universe, not that recognizable, where magic can have it’s space.

    Jorge: The inspiration is the entire world, I mean, when you see what really happens around us, people that get divided, people that point to each other, playing blame games. Creating imaginary enemies, monsters -or a zombie –  just to deny the inner zombie we all have inside. 

    The Gloomy Eyes experience is as vibrant to behold as it is heartwarming and silly – twisty dioramas depicting the character’s world that rotates and morphs as scenes bleed into each other as the story unfolds. Talk a bit about the design process and how it differs from traditional animation or even other VR experiences.

    Jorge: One of the differences may be that we’re really focused delimiting the information that the audience receives. The canvas in VR is limitless and it’s very common to overwhelm the audience with countless stimulations. What we aim to do is looking for boundaries among this canvas, and  keep the focus in the story, offering a narrative experience that can get to the audience. This made us reach to two fundamental points, the floating islands stages and theatrical lighting.

    Fernando: At the same time, there is an endless, infinite world within those worlds that we create. They are tiny universes with plenty of details to observe and to get immersed with. Our proposal is to go around the stages and the story, to spy on the characters. We get to a new plane of immersion.

    Although there is awareness of the physical presence in that world, the user wins a state of anonymity, depersonalization. and the story becomes the real protagonist.

    The sensoriality of the VR is our true engine. It is a physical sensation that does not exist in other audiovisual media.  We went deep with the desire to grasp things, to feel them. From touch. To find a melancholic emotionality.

    This quirky and emotional narrative is further brought to life by the voice of Colin Farrell. Talk a bit about how this collaboration came to be, and what the process was like working with him to record his performance?

    [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8m54QFpsNU4?feature=oembed&wmode=opaque&w=730&h=411]

    Fernando: We realized that a guide in this world could enhance and help to understand the poetics of the tale. The first step was to think who we wanted to tell us the story. We didn’t want an omnipresent god, we preferred to think of him as a character, who had the authority to tell a story about the dead and the living. So first came the character of Gravekeeper, who had things to say and could tell us things about the story that maybe we didn’t even know. We began to think of names of actors who fit the character, who have something dark but have a lot of sensitivity.

    Jorge: That’s how Collin showed up. We had seen The Lobster, we loved it. We asked him to create a character that was close, to tell the story as if he was telling it to a friend. He really exceeded our expectations. We loved his work from the first to the last sentence. We understood why he is where he is, he’s a genius. He was able to give life and exalt the character. Working with him was very pleasant.

    Have there been any particular design challenges that your team encountered that you didn’t expect?

    Fernando: I think that understanding the platform was the main point to dare here. To capture attention and bring the focus to different places, in a platform that is supposed to be infinite. Doing these without cutting off freedom was really a challenge. We also realized that classic methods -such as storyboard-  that are useful in a typical pipeline, were pointless here. We didn’t have the same result, they weren’t useful to our creative process at all.

    Jorge: Maybe it wasn’t so much encountering problems but understanding that it was a constant search with the certain clue that everything could always be improved. Magic appears when you explore an unexplored space. New things and discoveries appear during the process, maybe without consciously looking for them. They simply appear.

    Fernando: Finding simplicity was the key, and sometimes it became difficult.

    How did your experience creating animated shorts influence the creative direction of Gloomy Eyes?

    Fernando: Is very common to need a sort of guide to see VR, somebody to tell you where to stand or where to look. Here the story is the guide, we tried to make an intuitive content, even for children. In fact, despite having a language selector, there are no texts in the experience. It’s an experience ready to dive in, to feel.

    Jorge: We hope that these platforms reach as many people as possible, we are very excited to be part of it. 

    Gloomy Eyes has received numerous accolades at festivals around the world, bringing home multiple awards such as the SXSW Jury Award for Storytelling and ‘Best VR Experience’ at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival. How does it feel to get such positive response from film and animation circles with an immersive VR series?

    Jorge: It was a very nice surprise. Our first idea was to tell a good story in a very new landscape. To be honest we didn’t know what to expect, but traveling around the world showing our episodes wasn’t part of the initial plan.  What we treasure most and feel proud of is having the courage to make this leap into the void in a totally new and unexplored medium for us. It feels really good.

    Fernando:  Imaging that we could tell something sensitive within VR, being able to show a story in different cultures and understanding  that a unique sensitivity can be achieved, it’s really graceful.

    Have there been any particular bits of feedback from these festival screenings that have surprised you?

    Jorge: Every time somebody watches Gloomy Eyes we get surprised. I remember the first time we showed it, it was a prototype in Paris. There was a woman watching the experience, and once she took off the headset we could see tears in her eyes.  At first we thought that maybe something in the experience affected her sight, but then she told us that the story moved her, she was really touched by Gloomy Eyes. That was the moment we realized that we were telling a story that could reach people’s hearts. That moment was decisive and marked the following steps. That’s why we always try to honor the emotional content of the whole experience.

    Fernando: Yes, the truth is that until that moment everything we were working on was more like a thriller, we were very influenced by the infinite possibilities of VR, adrenaline, impact, effects. But that day we realized that the most powerful thing about Gloomy Eyes was the emotion brought by a simple story of two kids that dare to play with love. That definitely led our way.

    The feedback we received so far is always from a place of sensitivity, beyond the technological and innovative medium, this is what we value the most.

    What would you like to see from the VR ecosystem going forward in order to empower you to make even more engaging experiences? 

    Jorge: I think emotions happen in the body, but when we put on the headset there’s a disconnection. Having the headset on doesn’t allow us to see our own body. Something that can greatly change the physical experience of VR is to be able to see ourselves during the VR experience, to perceive ourselves as part of what we’re watching, not as an invisible spy. We have no doubt that it will evolve in many different directions and it will blow our minds every year. 

    Fernando: Yes, in the last two years the technology improved a lot and always towards different places, some that seem obvious and others that we didn’t expect, but with the headset’s improvements – lighter devices and wireless-  in addition to all the visual possibilities, the future is bright. There is also a really rich field in audio research. We hope it keeps on moving and enhance the VR experience as the latest visual developments.

    How long have you and your team been working on this project?

    Jorge: It’s started about three years ago. 

    Fernando: Yes, but it was occupying different spaces in our day to day.

    Jorge: But honestly, we’ve been thinking about doing something like this for 10 years… Telling a story inside the 3d space, without a 2d screen in between.

    What do you ultimately want audiences to take away from their time with Gloomy Eyes?

    Jorge: Nothing specific, the best thing that can happen to us is to receive a unique or strange interpretation from each different person.

    Fernando: Yeah, we like  the surprise when someone gives you back a new point of view. Many times we think that ideas go to a certain place, and when we get an answer in another sense the exchange becomes very enriching. It’s something that completely fills us and makes Gloomy Eyes really alive. 

    Outside of the remaining two episodes of Gloomy Eyes, what’s next on the horizon for your studio?

    Jorge & Fernando: Keep creating content and use enjoyment and passion for what we do as a compass to navigate the future. Desire and enjoyment rule, always.

    We can’t wait to see what you and the team have cooking next! Thanks for chatting with us.

    Check out all three episodes of Gloomy Eyes today, exclusively on Viveport Infinity!

    Website: LINK

  • Stop motion short filmed with the help of Arduino

    Stop motion short filmed with the help of Arduino

    Reading Time: < 1 minute

    Stop motion short filmed with the help of Arduino

    Arduino TeamJuly 30th, 2018

    One can imagine that making a stop motion animation film is a lot of work, but if you’ve ever wondered what one involves, James Wilkinson decided to document the process of making Billy Whiskers: The Mystery of the Misplaced Trowel. 

    The main character of this film is a mystery-solving feline, who is animated with the help of five servos that control mouth movements under Arduino control.

    In order to get shots that move properly, Wilkinson also came up with his own motion capture rig, moved by a number of stepper motors via an Arduino Mega. His documentation is certainly worth checking out if you’re interested in animatronics or advanced filming techniques, and you can see a trailer for the film below.

    [embedded content]

    Website: LINK

  • ISLE OF DOGS – ATARIS REISE | „Making of: Animators“ Featurette

    ISLE OF DOGS – ATARIS REISE | „Making of: Animators“ Featurette

    Reading Time: < 1 minute

    SLE OF DOGS – ATARIS REISE

    Ab 11.5. im Kino!

    Story Plot:

    ISLE OF DOGS tells the story of ATARI KOBAYASHI, 12-year-old ward to corrupt Mayor Kobayashi. When, by Executive Decree, all the canine pets of Megasaki City are exiled to a vast garbage-dump called Trash Island, Atari sets off alone in a miniature Junior-Turbo Prop and flies across the river in search of his bodyguard-dog, Spots. There, with the assistance of a pack of newly-found mongrel friends, he begins an epic journey that will decide the fate and future of the entire Prefecture.

    Trailer:

    Fox YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCor9rW6PgxSQ9vUPWQdnaYQ

  • I Create A World Of My Own Using Paper, Scissors And A Little Too Much Color!

    I Create A World Of My Own Using Paper, Scissors And A Little Too Much Color!

    Reading Time: 10 minutes

    Hello! My name is Nathanna Érica and I’m an illustrator and paper artist based in São Paulo, Brazil.

    Having been born in such a vibrant and diverse country allowed me to see the world through some very rainbow colored lenses (I even see colors in numbers and days of the week, it’s no joke!) and I try to express all the colorful mess that I call a brain into my art. When I started working with paper, I discovered that I could go even further in terms of textures, movement and, once again, color. For me, these three elements are essential to every piece I create, and that’s why I’ll always be working on a mermaid or two, or on some magical realm of enchanted macaws. Gee, what wouldn’t I give to live in a place like that?

    My main source of inspiration is nature, its shapes and patterns, as well as the many different cultures around the world and of course, movies and everything related to the art of filmmaking. Like many artists, early animation films have defined most of my childhood and I think it shows on my drawing style and use of color and composition. I love telling stories and I found out that using paper, texture and color allows me to be a better storyteller.

    Even though I’ve always considered myself an artist at heart, it took me five years of Law school to decide that doing anything else other than being an artist would be impossible.

    More info: Etsy

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    I create a world of my own using paper, scissors and a little too much color!

    Image credits: nathsketch

    Website: LINK

  • LEGO Minecraft Stopmotion Building Animation 4K Video!

    LEGO Minecraft Stopmotion Building Animation 4K Video!

    Reading Time: < 1 minute

     

     

    Yield renewable resources with The Farm! You’ll need food to survive, so fence in the livestock and channel the flowing water to nurture the crops. Harvest pumpkins, wheat, sugar cane and carrots. Use the crafting table to create a pumpkin helmet or jack-o‘-lantern. But watch out for the skeleton with his bow and arrow after nightfall! Rebuild the set for more LEGO® Minecraft™ creations or combine with 21115 The First Night and other sets in the series for an even bigger Minecraft adventure! Includes a Steve minifigure with an accessory, plus a skeleton, cow and a sheep.

    Includes a Steve minifigure with an accessory, plus a skeleton, cow and a sheep
    Features a crafting table, pumpkin helmet, 2 torches, fences, waterfall, sugar cane, pre-mature and mature wheat, carrots, tree, and a chest
    Includes skeleton’s bow
    Includes a shovel
    Includes 262 assorted LEGO® pieces
    Experience The Farm
    Nurture precious crops and supplies
    Watch out for the evil skeleton!
    The perfect gift for fans of LEGO® building and Minecraft™
    Rebuild for more LEGO® Minecraft™ creations
    Measures 4” (11cm) high, 10” (27cm) wide and 6” (17cm) deep
    Combine with 21115 The First Night and other sets in the series for an even bigger LEGO® Minecraft™ adventure!
    Add other biomes in the series to create your own LEGO® Minecraft™ world

    http://shop.lego.com/en-US/The-Farm-21114?fromListing=listing

  • Welt-Premiere des Charakters Chopper aus der neuen Animations-Serie ‚Star Wars Rebels‘

    Welt-Premiere des Charakters Chopper aus der neuen Animations-Serie ‚Star Wars Rebels‘

    Reading Time: 2 minutes

    schon bald geht die legendäre Star Wars-Saga endlich weiter, denn noch bevor der Film „Star Wars: Episode VII“ im Dezember 2015 (deutscher Kinostart: 17.12.2015) in die Kinos kommt, können sich die Fans auf einzigartigen neuen Content freuen.

    xfngc

     

    Der Start der Animations-Serie Star Wars Rebels ist in Deutschland ab Herbst 2014 mit großen Programm-Events auf Disney XD und dem Disney Channel (FTA) geplant.
    Ganz in der Tradition der Star Wars-Saga zeigt Star Wars Rebels actionreiche Abenteuer sowie einzigartige neue Charaktere.

    (mehr …)

  • Video Shows Off Disney’s Ultra Realistic Frozen Snow Simulator

    Video Shows Off Disney’s Ultra Realistic Frozen Snow Simulator

    Reading Time: < 1 minute

    For those who don’t already know, Frozen is Disney’s latest computer animated musical fantasy-comedy film that’s loosely inspired by Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tale The Snow Queen, it is the 53rd animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. The film’s animators visited an Ice Hotel in Quebec, Canada to study how light reflects and refracts on snow and ice. For the film’s setting, the animators used the landscape of Norway and the feel of the winter season of Wyoming for inspiration.

    f2hKMNo

     

    Peter Del Vecho explained that „the title Frozen came up independently of the title Tangled. It’s because, to us, it represents the movie. Frozen plays on the level of ice and snow but also the frozen relationship, the frozen heart that has to be thawed. We don’t think of comparisons between Tangled and Frozen, though.“ He also mentioned that the film will still retain its original title, The Snow Queen, in some foreign countries: „because that just resonated stronger in some countries than Frozen. Maybe there’s a richness to The Snow Queen in the country’s heritage and they just wanted to emphasize that.

    Official Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9H1gRQ6S7gg#t=116

  • Playstation 4 trophy unlock animation revealed

    Playstation 4 trophy unlock animation revealed

    Reading Time: < 1 minute

    GearNuke.com have compared the old PS3 and new PS4 trophy unlocks animations in two gifts you can see below:

    Playstation 3

    Playstation 4

     

    Official Source: http://gearnuke.com/take-look-trophy-unlock-notification-playstation-4-compares-playstation-3/

  • Throwback Thursday Pixel Animation – GBCity Short Film

    Throwback Thursday Pixel Animation – GBCity Short Film

    Reading Time: < 1 minute

    Game Boy City” is an animated short between 3D and retro-gaming directed by What Pixel You On, with music by FantomenK.

    The first „3D“ pixel art animation from What Pixel You On. It’s a little rough around the edges, but if I didn’t upload it now, I don’t think I ever would have. Can you spot the Keith Apicary references? Enjoy! :]

    Music is by FantomenK and used with permission: – You and the Sprites – Slayer Waves Voice acting by Elly from Appchat: http://www.youtube.com/appchat Art & Animation by Liam Reddington.

    Also, special thanks to Elly for coming up with the name!

    It looks like what might have been the Game Boy with a 3D display. 😉 I love it!

     

    Official Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6O4ggc33QI