Friday, May 29, 2009

The Escape

On and off for the past few weeks, I've been writing the storyboard for a new animated short, The Escape. Compared to my first three, this one's plot has a little bit more meaning.

I have lagged a little recently, and the first few preparatory steps took a little longer than I planned. However, now that high school's over (PRAISE THE LAWD), my free time during the day has increased exponentially, and the animation process is in full swing.

This is a quick shot from the intro. A woman talking on her cell waits in traffic in front of the main character (blurred, in the back).



As all of my belongings (myself and my computer included) will soon be off to Pennsylvania, I can't give a definite completion date. I am really looking forward to finishing this, though, so hopefully it will be soon.

Friday, May 8, 2009

The Hazards of Love

Haven't done one of these since March. Lame.

I got the idea for this from The Decemberist's album, The Hazards of Love. The album is essentially about a woman named Margaret falling in love with a shape-shifting forest dweller. All in all, pretty weird and just a little gay. The music, however, is enjoyable.

The twisted branches take their lyrics from the second track, The Hazards of Love I (The Prettiest Whistles Won't Wrestle the Thistles". The lines read:

"And there she came upon
a white and wounded fawn
singing ...ooohhh
the hazards of love."

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Tilt-shift miniature faking

Tilt-shift miniature faking is a process in which a photograph of a life-size location or object is manipulated so that it looks like a photograph of a miniature scale model.

This is one of the most interesting photographic techniques I've seen in awhile. Through simply adjusting the focus in certain areas of a picture, you can manipulate the actual size (or the appearance of it) of what was photographed.

For example, here's a miniature fake of Jodhpur, a city in India:



And the original photo:




Miniature faking has probably been around for quite some time, but this completely fascinates me nonetheless. I love the effect. In fact, about an hour ago when I started looking into this technique, I stumbled upon tiltshiftmaker.com, a site in which you upload a photo, and it automatically adjusts the focus and creates a fake miniature.

HERE'S ONE I DID :D
I, of course, used a snapshot from one of our marching shows this past year. Hooray for being a loser. Here's the original:




And the modified version:


Saturday, May 2, 2009

Fallingwater

Now, I normally work only in the two-dimensional arts (see blog title), but occasionally, being an architecture major, I'll work on projects
IN THE THIRD DIMENSION.


That being said, take a look at my latest project, a scale model of Frank Lloyd Wright's masterpiece, Fallingwater. This house caught my interest a little while ago, and this was my way of getting to know it a little better.

Here are some pictures from real life:




And this, ladies and gents, is my balsa wood, acyrlic paint, hot glued version. My landscaping didn't do the beautiful area of Bear Run..

..nearly enough justice, but I think I captured the entire house pretty well all the same.






















SEXY.

(be on the lookout for my next animated short, currently in the works)