Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Assignment #4: Nighttime

Ciao, ragazzi!

Sorry, guys. This one's a little bootleg...and by that, I mean I'm not very impressed with it. The scene is set in the hills under a star-filled night sky. I wanted to animated a glowing meteor flying through the sky but it just wasn't working. I tried to have the glitter follow the meteor like Ben's fish example, but I'm not really sure I fully understood how he did it.

Oh well! This gives me something to build on for the next project.

As far as the assignment requirements:
I used the ease in and outs for the movement out from the sky. I also used the parenting tool for the squash and stretch entrance for the hills and the clouds. That allowed me to bring them in using the same style but still be able to animate the cloud movements later.

(And even though you can't tell from the video I did use nested compositions. I love pre-composing! All that clutter really annoys me....)

Nighttime from Alex McCrea on Vimeo.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Animated Short: Crossing Guard

Ciao, ragazzi!

Happy Monday! I wanted to share another past creation. My final project for my first animation class. The assignment was to create an animated short in either Flash, After Effects or a combination of the two. I chose to do the entire thing using Flash CS3 because After Effects scared me at the time. (Not so much anymore. Don't worry, Ben!) :)

The story is fairly simple, primarily because there wasn't much planning behind it. I kinda just started with the idea of an over-eager student crossing guard and went with it. Things I learned: make a storyboard first, don't wait till the last minute, and USE A TABLET! Throughout my first animation class, I hadn't bought a tablet yet and this was almost all done with a mouse (I later went back and re-animated his facial expressions with a tablet). Like Ben always says, "drawing with a mouse is like drawing with a rock!"

Anyway, enough explanation. Enjoy my first finished project!

Crossing Guard from Alex McCrea on Vimeo.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

My First Animation: Paintbrush Loop

Ciao, ragazzi!

This will be just a short post. I just wanted to share my very first animation piece. It's the first project for my animation class with Geoff Marslett at the University of Texas at Austin and the assignment was to create a self-contained loop. Basically the animation needed to have an action that caused itself to be repeated over and over again.

For my first go-around on flash, I thought it went incredibly well. I fell in love with how easy it was to animate simple designs. It was something I had tried before with a pencil and a flip book, but Flash helped me take it to the next level. There's just about everything in there: motion tweens, shape tweens, and, of course, frame-by-frame. Enjoy.

Paintbrush Loop from Alex McCrea on Vimeo.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Project #3: No Swine Flu!

Ciao, ragazzi!

Here's my public service announcement for the week. WASH YOUR HANDS! Now, I don't normally do the whole public restrooms thing, but I was in one earlier this week and saw not one, not two, but THREE guys just walk out without washing their hands. GROSS! (And not to mention, DANGEROUS!)

Ok....this might be a little bit of melodrama, but seriously folks, lets do our best to make sure everyone stays healthy and germ free.

NO SWINE FLU! from Alex McCrea on Vimeo.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Project #2: Northern Lights

Ciao, ragazzi! Come state? ("How are ya'll?")

For my Photoshop project I wanted to do two things:

1) Transform something. Not just "cut and paste" but completely make over an image into something new.

2) Work with water in some shape or form.

The following are the before and after pictures:


Before




After



Basically, I transformed this image of an arctic wasteland into large glacier formations floating in a sea under an Aurora Borealis. For my first attempt at Photoshop, I have to say I'm really pleased.

The trickiest part was creating the surface part of the water. I had to mask out the ice formations into a different layer and then rendered a couple of fiber effects on top of a solid blue rectangle shape. I used the "Perspective" transform tool to make the ripples in the water look like they were coming from the horizon. As for the reflections, I masked out each of the large glacier formations, used a horizontal flip, placed them underneath the water effect and lowered their opacity.

The sky is just the MacOS Snow Leopard background with a rendered cloud effect placed over it with an "Overlay" blender.

The last thing to do was a color correction for the glaciers so they were no longer the stark blue. I added a little purple in the mid-tones and shadows to add a little warmth and make it look like the Northern Lights were reflecting upon them.

And there you go. I hope you like it!

Alex