The website I made at the end of my 1st year at college doesn't look good at all.
At the time it was a good exercise, and the 1st year of college was a lot more about covering the full spectrum of disciplines withing the digital design sector. The site basically encapsulates the 1st year course, with lots of different projects, which were all covered in a an introductory way.
The look of the site and all the work shown is miles away from I'd like it to be, and not anywhere near where it should be to get work, so the plan for my year 2 site will be different; I plan to design a single good looking page, which will house 2 or 3 QuickTime videos (if they are good enough) and/or a showreel. I may also have a few stills or storyboard images. I will try to design a new identity and base the page around that. This one spells amateur!
We won't be briefed to address the site again until nearly Easter time, so that gives me an extra reason to focus on the portfolio. My work for year 2 so far shows some promise, but I still need to work through my observer brief production, and I want to improve the look of the some of the design before I complete the After Effects production.
I see all this as positive and yet another reason to work really hard on my work.
Much time has been spent this week learning enough After effects stuff to be able to proceed with my Observer brief as previously planned on paper. I have spent weeks planning, doing paperwork, drawing storyboards, designing, cutting animatics, and now it is time to move forward with production.
I have been working pretty obsessively on this, but get the feeling I will need loads more experience before I am good enough to get a decent job, but I know I am moving in the right direction. I think I know what to do now in after effects using the 3d space. This test has the right techniques used, but it currently doesn't look good yet or move in the right way, but I know that I can proceed from this point.
It would have been helpful to have a good knowledge of film language now. It would be helpful to have an idea of shots in mind. My background in music making is proving very useful, but it seems to be good at motion graphics you need to also have numerous other skills. I have realised it would help to know about:
Photography Drawing editing Film Language Animation Design
I will have to study films and adverts and start breaking them down, getting anal(ytical) about them.
On a positive note, I have completely got the motion design bug now. I think I have found my calling, and find After Effects great fun. I think I love it, and will find a way to make it pay.
I have done another couple of 8 hour days on this, and now I have a whole 17 seconds to show for my troubles!
I am learning loads of things, as I have to work out After Effects and practical motion design as I go along. I have learned lots of basic things such as:
Basic transform and animation Easing in and Out & the grid editor Setting up compositions and designing in Photoshop and Illustrator for AE some of the AE interface and a few shortcuts audio synchronisation
I have barely touched:
Effects Multi-layered comps Video layers Masks 3d and loads more
Much of my time has been spent watching tutorials and I do have an idea of what the program does, but it will just take time to get to grips with it. Mistakes will need to get made, and an amount of trial and error business needs to happen.
I am hoping to get good enough so as not to be embarrassing before I start my work placement at BDA on the 11th Feb 2008. This is about 7 weeks away, so I feel I have to speed up and learn more ASAP.
I am still rather new to this motion graphics business, and much of this last term has been spent working out how to get projects up and running; thinking, designing, paperwork, storybaords, general plotting and watching loads tutorials every day from Lynda.com (which I highly recommended btw). There's so much to it, methods to get the projects moving that I don't yet know. I have found myself getting stuck, but then just try some other angle to proceed.
The nature of moving image design involves design, sound, 3d space, cinematic thinking and animation, and I have found it odd to think about all these issues at the same time. One positive way forward was to rough out animatics to get the flow working better and the sound in place. I have read many times that women have evolved to multi-talk, and men haven't. I know I can only do one thing at a time, and it is vital to be able to find methods to work through these projects with the bigger picture in mind, but only addressing one thing at a time.
This piece uses a section of a record by Junior Boys, called "In The Morning (Hot Chip Remix)" - which has been subtlety re-edited with a few over-dubs and effects to emphasisise the theme (the head opens up and shuts) ands a line of spoken copy (by Penny Smith). The version of the music here is roughly mixed and could be slicker, but It works well enough for now.
It has taken ages to even get this done - this is largely as I am working out what to do, and getting stuck into After Effects. I hope to complete the whole track over the next few months - as this is a good way to get stuck in and experiment.
My Mate Matt has pointed out this fantastic Photo blog from some guy in Brazil. Plingrafias' blog gathers together great photos on a monthly basis. Lots of inspiration can had here, as well as lots of amazing colour palettes.
SVA student Tamara Gildengers Connolly used type characters to create this music video for Nina Simone singing “Feeling Good.” Using type in this manner seems to be a fairly typical assignment in motion graphics and design classes, but the results manage to impress in this piece.
This a first-draft animatic for my typography extended practice module.
I ideally wanted to do the whole song as a typo-motion video, however this is proving to be a lot of work, especially as I am having to learn the whole process and the technical side of things (Adobe After Effects) from scratch. I think I will now concentrate on this section (as it gives me an option to complete the rest of the song over the college year), and add it to my portfolio.
So far the process has consisted mainly of designing the boards in Photoshop and Illustrator, creating all the elements in their separate layers, and adding texture like paper and ink splats into the compositions. I have spent an amount of time working on bending the typeface (ITC Avant Garde) into logo like shapes, and chopping up images and vector tracing (I have done this for the entire song, however I have so far only used some eyes).
I am only moderately happy with my designs, but I feel I need to stop this part at some stage and move forward to the animation and production in After Effects, as I need experience in this area. I plan to do most of my briefs as motion graphics, so badly need to learn techniques, make mistakes and 'learn by doing'. My aim is to work on this and my designing until summer 2008.