Friday, August 19, 2011

VS C4D 633 Day 02 Lecture Notes

Here are the notes from yesterday's class:

If you find some of the text is being cut-off, try downloading it as a PDF.
  1. In the above slideshow click on the expand icon to the right of the "Slide 1/21" text.
  2. Click on Actions->Download as PPT

Friday, August 12, 2011

VS C4D 633 Day 01 - Homework & Lecture Notes

Hi Guys,

Great class today! Your homework is:
  • Create some text
  • Throw it in a fracture object 
  • Use Plain or Random Effector 
  • Extra Credit J for using Falloff 
  • Add in a Video Plane BEHIND your text 
  • Animate your camera 
  • Render this out, bring it into AE 
  • Replace the video plane, with an image or video.
  • NOTE: At a basic level, I'm looking for mastery of the technical skills involved in the above tasks. But more specifically, and this is why you should care about doing homework, I'm looking for a sense of design. You should be able to look at your finished animation and say: this belongs on TV. If that means simplifying your design: do it. Simple things to check for:
    • Framing: is your text always in view? Stop at random frames throughout your animation and see if you can't make the images more dynamic by moving your camera.
    • Color Scheme: Do your colors go together, or do they clash? If you have bad color-sense (like I do from time-to-time) check out Adobe's Kuler for inspiration.
      • Make sure the colors you choose in C4D go well with the footage you'll be bringing into AE.
    • Motivated Movement: Do the movements make sense? Do they have weight? Is there purpose behind the movements or are objects just moving to move?
    • Exposure: Is your scene too bright or dark?
    • Lighting: One light can be enough, but it usually isn't. Add lights to help direct the viewers attention. Avoid painfully harsh shadows, and visible spotlights (unless they serve the story).

You can view the lecture notes here:

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Travel as Teacher

I'm writing this post from my studio apartment just after sun has set. This morning I walked to my car, drove to work, worked inside of my office, drove home. I've spent less than 15 minutes outside today and a total of zero minutes in a physical environment that is not familiar to me.

Just as the stickiness of immobility was collecting on my skin I clicked one... more... link... and arrived at these terrific short films:

Move

MOVE from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.


Learn

LEARN from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.


Eat

EAT from Rick Mereki on Vimeo.


A friend was telling me about a trip she had taken with a person who complained that every tourist-trap-outing was something done better from the comfort and relative inexpensiveness of her home city. On the face of it, this is likely true. Most cosmopolitan cities have museums, and performance, and food, and classes, and heck if you were determined: a chance to interact with exotic animals. However, and I don't think I'm alone on this, when I'm at home I stay at home. I don't often find myself taking advantage of the delights that a traveler to my city might revel in.

Every once in a while, and perhaps more often than that, we need to place ourselves in environments that challenge us to leave what is comfortable and take in all that is around us. Travel is a shortcut to those experiences, and the above films make that abundantly clear. Travel forces us to move, eat, and learn.