Wednesday, September 19, 2012

3D Tests

Not too proud of this one. Though I like how the girls are cut-outs, how they sink into the background and how the bamboo is a nice faded texture on the foreground.

I love this. There's not only fake depth made by the layout of the background, there's real depth with my choice of colours. Everything in this photo rocks in my mind.

The best looking 3D test here. Simple, but technically well done. I made the center dark so the leaves would pop out less from there, and the edges have more colour in order to make the leaves stand out more. With the positioning and size of the leaves it honestly looks like they're falling down, and the 3D is correct with all of them. The smoke and stars were just added detail.


Monday, September 17, 2012

CD Cover

  Technical
Dodging near the bottom of the image in order to add contrasting light/dark colours. I had to create polygons (such as hexagons, so many hexagons!) in specific sizes then select the polygons, switch layers and copy/paste specific parts of the image below to get the shapes I wanted. Making the logo glow or look like a stamp required use of tricky filters. I applied many filters to change the shape and overall colours of the image, giving it a natural feel. I used a brush to get the base for the stitching, copy-pasted then used a filter to apply jagged edges. After applying these edges I applied a filter that gave it a cloth-like texture, completing the process.

Idea or Concept
My main inspiration was one of the images shown on the "CD Album Covers.pdf" file. It was a series of interesting shapes with actual art inside the shapes. I decided to shape my cover similarly, giving a lot of blank space for the mind to fill in the details. My initial idea was much different, though, the initial idea had no blank gaps and was going to have very little editing. My initial idea was something like Little Big Planet, in that the world would be regular fabric stitched on to the surface of either the wood or a blank screen. But as I was limited to pictures of post-it notes and dish clothes, I made do with my materials.

Influences
The artists listed on the reference page inspired the shapes on my final cover. Matt Zeinstra was also a great influence as he convinced me to try certain filters and certain other strategies to make the picture look a little less horrible.

Composition
I made most of the image unbalanced so the viewer's eyes would swivel around the picture, but I purposefuly made some of the parts pixel-perfect. The spaces between the rectangles are all completely even, with the points being at the direct center of the rectangle and each point corresponding to the edge of another rectangle. I tried to make things look proper while beind misshapen.
As for eye movement, I want people to read the logo, follow the inverted circles then read the title of the album. I figured that was the best way to have the most important bits stand out while maintaining a brightly coloured initial photo. The rest of the shapes are cosmetic, they aren't meant to draw the viewer's eyes. This was the way I avoided clutter, as that can make an album cover look absolutely horrendous.

Motivation
The Cat Empire has to be my favourite band, and being given time and marks for dedicating work to them is something I took advantage of. I also wanted to create something professional looking, a legitimate piece of art. Most of my other works have been scribbles and small photoshops, but I feel this is the first thing I can put on a resume and brag about.

Critical Assesement
I dislike all the white space. Last-minute I've been tossing the idea in my mind about changing the blank space to a yellow background with coffee-stained edges. It would give the cover a very rustic look to it, with a hand-made indie feel. Though I've asked the opinions of others around me and they disagree, so I kept the space white. Though I figure it's good to be minimalistic when everyone else has cluttered pictures. What surprised me was when Matt told me to use a couple filters on my initial image (which was a bunch of post-it notes taped to a dish cloth) and Haela told me she liked what I made (before the crazy editing). If it weren't for their contributions I would have scrapped the entire cover. What surprised me was it actually started to look good after enough editing, and in the end it not only looked appealing, people mistook it for an actual album cover!

If I had more time to go over my concept, I'd probably take the time to manually edit the mosaic part of the back cover to look like stained glass, and change the stitching to look like actual stitches. Given even more time I'd alter the shapes on the front cover to more varied ones, squares and triangles and pentagons in order to offer more variety. But again, minimalistic.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Mood Board

It's much easier to see all these images if you load the larger size, it's something like 3000x2000 px.
MOOD BEARD

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Monday, January 24, 2011

MATH

What I like most about my rotoball
I like the transitions between environments. The initial environment had a tree and hill. At the loss of a tree, the hill changed. The environment changed again as the ball was thrown against the ground. After the hill started falling you saw a sky-borne environment. Then it crashed into rocks at the bottom and yet again another environment was introduced. I wanted to portray an adventure to the people who watched the Rotoball ( I wanted to portray this more than I wanted to inspire creativity, as I'm not a creative person).

I have to admit I love the movements throughout the rotoball. Almost every movement in every rotoball is supposed to be realistic (it's traced) but that's what causes me to like it. Proper movements are what drive a good animation in this case. If the movements were choppy and the effects good then the animation would look awkward, and I would have disliked it.

I also liked the colour scheme, because the colours were vibrant but nothing stood out too much (not even my hair!) and thus the viewer was given the chance to look wherever they want without being distracted.

What I like least about my rotoball
 I disliked the time limit. 15 seconds of what I animated was not enough to satisfy a proper viewing. The animation should have been a minute or longer to portray a story, but there was none. There was just a quick, simple adventure. If there had been more time to make a good plot and design then it would have improved greatly.

I also dislike the amount of creativity involved. To be honest there was barely anything creative about this piece. Everything that's shown is a basic, linear storyline. There was nothing creative or fancy (not like butterflies turning into a net being used to represent something deeper) it was all too simple.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Quinton Bran Storm

BRAN STORM
For the animated yearbook summative

I have to pick a specific theme for each page in my yearbook. In the front page I hope to have one of two things. Either space related or cartoon related. I could put cartoon characters over it and give it an uncoloured, but good quality title. Although it would look uninteresting to those who browse covers looking for large, stark contrast. The uncoloured look would be easy to do, but hard to draw. I could find myself a free cartoon brush if I'm desperate. But it doesn't seem like a good idea, I'll move on to the space idea now.

The space version could offer me a large amount of creativity with blurs and brushes, and interesting strokes. It would be a little harder to pull off and I'd need a good colour pallette to follow it up. I'd have a darker background with only the basic stars there, but in the foreground I would have bright lights and large, smooth strokes. They would be highlighted and contain (mostly) the brightest lights of the image. The words would be a cut-out sort of on the stars, or maybe asteroids.

The second page would consist of a technological theme, I would probably talk about Robotics and the features, include pictures of the Robotics team. It could go over really well. The third page would then be a sports page (almost a requirement these days).