Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Final
For the final assignment I will try to include every skill and technique we have learned this semester into one complete piece. I want to further expand my last project, to further announce camera reaction to the figures, animation of the characters arms and eyes, along with separate scenes that will transition. I will use all three compositions below.
Scene 1: Shot With an Arrow: A silhouetted figure stands on top of a cliff, looking towards the sky. (His silhouette might change to
the texture and color of the final scene) He is shot from behind with an arrow, then falls off the cliff to his death.
Scene 2: The Pit Below: The man falls into the Pit of hell. He is consumed by fire. The figure above blinks his eyes.
Scene 3: Stoned Hell: He continues his journey through hell. (Intense camera action/ Zooms and Panning, which I found a great tutorial for..... http://www.videocopilot.net/tutorial/advanced_camera_tips/
Scene 1: Shot With an Arrow: A silhouetted figure stands on top of a cliff, looking towards the sky. (His silhouette might change to
the texture and color of the final scene) He is shot from behind with an arrow, then falls off the cliff to his death.
Scene 2: The Pit Below: The man falls into the Pit of hell. He is consumed by fire. The figure above blinks his eyes.
Scene 3: Stoned Hell: He continues his journey through hell. (Intense camera action/ Zooms and Panning, which I found a great tutorial for..... http://www.videocopilot.net/tutorial/advanced_camera_tips/
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Stoned Hell
3-D. For this project, I divided all of my separate layers on the z axis to create a higher depth of field. I created a new camera layer, so that I could move through the landscape. I have to figure out a finish. I might end up having the camera zoom all the way to the background, until everything is so giant you can't tell what it is. I also thought of an image to place behind the woman in the middle that could be the end result of the zoom.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Demon Warp Face Test
Ahhh, the demon warp, isn't it nice! I watched this tutorial 6 or 7 times through, then started filming. I filmed a friend of mine, Clay behind his house in a brick-outlined parking lot. The first time I filmed him he moved his body too much for me to track. Most of the tutorial is Motion tracking, but it's 2-D, not 3-D, so the actor needs to keep his body at least aligned with the camera, and not have too much motion from the neck or head. I will definitely take this experiment further.
check out the tutorial at http://www.videocopilot.net/tutorials/q/demon%20face%20warp/
check out the tutorial at http://www.videocopilot.net/tutorials/q/demon%20face%20warp/
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