suuuper late but hopefully fellow Prom fans can enjoy :)
super old animatic but hopefully fellow prom fans enjoy it

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Switzerland

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China
suuuper late but hopefully fellow Prom fans can enjoy :)
super old animatic but hopefully fellow prom fans enjoy it
LOOK AT DEM FIGHTER GALS GO!
I started it as a practice and study for how to direct motions and actions on storyboards but OH BOI it took so much time then I initially thought...
there’s a few frames where proportion goes a lil wrong that I feel a bit bad about, but in general I think it came out okay!
it also happens to be an SU fanart gif so hope you guys enjoy
:>
Storyboards
Playing around with colour palettes and sketching up roughs for a new animatic..
#storyboad ✏️ • • • • • #sketching #story #dailysketch #characterdesign #sketchings #comics #sketch #skechbook #digitalart #dailydrawing # #doodle #doodling #doodles #dailydrawing #drawingtime #cartoon #cartoonist #cartooning #artwork #art #painting #drawing #illustration #drawingoftheday ✍🏽
Posters and Storyboard
Tuesday we spent a few hours in a studio photographing posters as an exorcise for a future project, during this we learnt how to adjust lighting and certain camera controls to get the highest quality picture of a poster on a wall.
We used special light tools called soft box’s to reduce the harshness of a light source but still maintain its power, since the posters were shiny we had to be carful with the light source to ensure we don’t reflect any unwanted light off the posters and spoiling the quality. The cameras we were using ranged from 500D to 700D, the 700D was wired to a computer and using Adobe Light room I was able to check my images on a full screen for flaws, which proved to be incredibly beneficial to me because I could spot smaller details which would be almost impossible and certainly overlooked on the camera’s previewer.
Looking into the settings of the camera we were told the best settings to used depending on the environment. The ‘aperture’ was set to 5.6, which was a low setting however since the poster is a flat image we didn’t want and depth of field. The ‘White Balance’ was at first set to tungsten due to the yellow lights in the room, but once we turned them off we had to set it to flash because the camera was hooked up to the flashlights. The shutter speed was the variable we changed in this situation in order to get the correct exposure, after adjusting the shutter speed all the way from 125th of a second to 3 seconds I found the perfect exposure level.
After an early lunch we watched a video on storyboarding that went into great detail into comic book illustrators and we even came across some names we learnt in Lucy’s lectures. The majority of the video was focusing on the illustrator’s lives and how the work has affected them, financially and mentally. Honestly I didn’t find this overly informative with relevant information to me, however since I am still only in the first few months of this course I assume I wont know what I need to know until I need to know it, and once the time comes then I’ll rather have this information than have to look for it.
Something other than a PonPon video? Shocking. XD
This is for Lighty, it's not the one who works for Dinsey, but have a full storyboard version of Defying Gravity. =)
Today I went to a storyboarding masterclass hosted by Frank Gladstone and it was pretty amazing, insightful and inspiring. I loved the Animation Course I took, but after today I feel like the course is really missing out on this.. How can any animation course take students to the third year, where they have to make a short film, without guiding them through storytelling, how to successfully develop a plot and characters, how to make their vision understandable. I had my own film on the back of my head through the whole thing and in the end still managed to ask Frank a few questions that got me thinking even further. It was great!