Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Pixar (CGI)


·      The people who work at Pixar the movies they come up with is the things that they want it to be. For example the Pixar lamp was made by a guy who was sitting there in his office and his friend brought in a baby and he was looking at him and the lamp and wanted to make a baby lamp
·      Monsters Inc. was made by when the guy was young that what he use to imagine of seeing and he be scared so he made the monsters come a live.
·      Toy Story the character woody used to be a mean, angry and bad character but they made him to become nicer.
·      They always do the voice record before the animation.
·      All films need art, design and more than one person to make the film.
·      The Incredible where the both parents are arguing it was made like that because it actually happened between parents.
·      The Incredible is acting out how a usual family would act.

Friday, 4 October 2013

The Disapearance of Haruhi Suzumiya




I enjoyed watching manga because its differeent to what I usually would watch. I like how they're animate and formed, I think its really clever. The way the anime been drawn makes it look like its a manga charecter.

The anime I watched was about this guy who was planning a christam party with a group of people but when he arrived on the 18th of December he realises everything has changed, the two girls who were helping with the christmas party was missing. This guy called  Royoko Asakura  has mysteriously returned, Mikuru Asahina does not reconize him and Yuki NAgato is an ordinary human. No one knows whats happening except him. He was asking everyone in the class if they knew the two girls (Haruhi and SOS Brigate). As December 20 comes, the guy (Kyon) learns from Taniguchi that Harhuri was at another high school the whole time, along with Itskui. By revealing his identity to her as 'John Smith'. He managed to convince Haruhi to believe his sotry.

After meeting up with the future Mikuru, he obtains as uninstall program from the past's Yuki, which need to be short at the culprit right after the change in the eary hours of December 18.

 Amrica and England been influenced because anime is nearly in every country there would be 1 or 2% of people watching it.
The anime is different to any other anime because this kind anime its different to any other cartoon
 The charecters are cartoon manga charecters.









Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Techniques

claymation        

Clay animation or claymation is one of many forms of stop motion animation. Each animated piece, either character or background, is "deformable"made of a malleable substance, usually  
Plasticine clay

All traditional animation is produced in a similar fashion, whether done through can animation or stop motion. Each frame, or still picture, is recorded on film or digital media and then played back in rapid succession. When played back at a frame rate greater than 10–12 frames per second, a fairly convincing illusion of continuous motion is achieved. While the playback feature creating an illusion is true of all moving images (from zoetrope to film to videogames), the techniques involved in creating CGI are generally removed from a frame-by-frame process.

Wednesday, 12 June 2013

Techniques

Stop Motion
Stop Motion (also known as stop frame) is an animation technique to make a physically manipulated object appear to move on its own. The object is moved in small increments between individually photographed frames, creating the illusion of movement when the series of frames is played as a continuous sequence. Dolls with movable joints or clay figures are often used in stop motion for their ease of repositioning. Stop motion animation using plasticine is called clay animation or "clay-mation". Not all stop motion requires figures or models; many stop motion films can involve using humans, household appliances and other things for comedic effect. Stop motion using objects is sometimes referred to as object animation.

The term "stop motion", related to the animation technique, is often spelled with a hyphen, "stop-motion". Both orthographical variants, with and without the hyphen, are correct, but the hyphenated one has, in addition, a second meaning, not related to animation or cinema: "a device for automatically stopping a machine or engine when something has gone wrong" (The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, 1993 edition)
Stop motion is often confused with the time lepse technique, where still photographs of a live surrounding are taken at regular intervals and combined into a continuous film. Time lapse is a technique whereby the frequency at which film frames are captured is much lower than that used to view the sequence. When played at normal speed, time appears to be moving faster and thus lapsing.