Friday, October 30, 2009

Week 6: Flash Family Tree

Week 6
Describe your idea for your Animation/Interactivity assignment (which is due in Week 9). What inspired this idea? Which examples shown in lecture/lab gave you inspiration? What other examples exist on the Internet that can act as examples/inspiration? (Link to them and describe how they are relevant.) What will you have to do to accomplish your idea (e.g. any research, skill building, etc.)? Which techniques in Flash will you employ to make it happen?

For my animation project I have decided to create an interactive Family Tree.

I got this idea after recently meeting up with a family member (whom I’m not ever sure how I’m related to) and talking about other family members (which I can’t remember the names of). She told me that she has a section of her family tree copied down, and that she knows of other people in the family who have done the same. She asked if I could take on the responsibility of the records she has been holding onto. I realised immediately that the best way to keep all this information was online.

Someday I hope to turn the project into a website, but for now I’m keeping it simple and close to my parents.

An example from class that helped me figure out how to make the tree grow. I learned I have to draw the full tree, place it on a future key frame, and then work backwards, erasing more parts on every previous frame until I reach the first frame which only has the roots.

I looked up a bunch of flash examples online, but none were very similar to what I have in my head.

This is the only video I could find that even remotely looked like what I wanted. It’s really cool but way beyond what I can or want to do right now: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUaE0UlGYxE

I want people’s names be buttons on the tree and when you click on one you go to another frame which has a short bio and picture of that person.

For my movie clip I’m going to have small leaves on the tree which will constantly be waving in the wind.

I haven’t chosen music yet because I know that will be easier to choose once more of the project is done. All I know is that I want it to be subtle.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Week 8: Digital Footprint

We recently discussed our digital footprints, and how important they will be when we begin our careers. I realized about a year ago that I needed to adjust my privacy settings on my Facebook page. I don’t mind having pictures of me at parties, as long as I still look respectable. I doubt my future employers are going to expect me to look like I don’t have any fun. I have friends who have Facebook albums of them doing drugs and other things which I know would repel any employers from hiring them.
In regards to web pages, I looked up maggiemacpherson.com/.ca/.net and the address is not taken yet. I want to buy the .ca one for sure and maybe the .com one too. I hope I am successful enough some day that people are actually thinking of me when they Google my name. When I Google my name I get a few other Maggie Macpherson’s on Facebook, one on LinkedIn, and a mention of a woman in the New York Times who works in Film. So it looks like I have a good shot at having a distinctive Digital Footprint.
Wikipedia split up Digital Footprints into two types: passive and active. A passive digital footprint is created by other users, such as being mentioned in a blog or article or being tagged in another user’s photo. Active digital footprints are created by the user, examples include creating your own Facebook page and albums, creating your own blog, writing an article, or creating a web site.
The passive digital footprint scares me. I have had to ask people to delete or un-tag photos of me before and it is not fun. Luckily, I have no enemies, and hope to keep it that way, but if I did, it doesn’t take much to spread rumors throughout Facebook and Google and anywhere online. This is why I am glad that teachers teach their students to find credible sources, we need to know not to trust everything we read, because someday it may be about us. Facebook and YouTube have pretty much made everyone possible paparazzi. This may not be such a bad thing though. Actions have consequences, especially in a time which is so obsessed with communication.
I have a prediction about the digital community and gossip. It’s not even really a prediction since it has already started. I think that there will be very little if any credible online information anymore. Before Web 2.0, most people believed everything they read came from facts. They may have disagreed with it, but, compared to now, they didn’t wonder whether or not the entire story was made up. Now, everything we read needs to be questioned. Also, when I hear about a celebrity or anyone being pursued by the media, I usually feel sorry for them. They are people, they make mistakes, and if my life was under a spot light then I would have a few scandals on my record too. I think the public is realizing this and, I hope, we stop obsessing over the mistakes of people around us and start celebrating their accomplishments and use mass communication to learn from each other instead of hurt each other.
I got a little side tracked there…in short I’m going to work on my digital footprint this winter holiday and maybe create another blog or web site.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Week 7: Scopitone Videos

http://scopitones.com/

Scopitone videos:

Bright colors on the set and costumes

Colors look washed out on video

People dancing, woman show a lot of skin...

“flashes” and “scratches” on frames

Long takes, not many close ups


Modern Videos:

Animation: Boom Boom Pow

Clubs

Clear pictures and colors

Short takes, different angles and locations

Lots of close ups


I was surprised how similar the Scopitone Videos are to todays videos. Obviously they have many differences, but a few things stuck around: singers in different locations, women using their sexuality/showing skin, dancing, branding (representing their "look" or "type")

Friday, October 9, 2009

Week 4: Typography

Week 4
Find 3 designs (posters, flyers, billboards, magazine ads/layouts, album art, political propaganda, product labels, product packaging, DVD covers, whatever) and discuss the typographic choices made in the design. Is the typography effective? Why or why not? Does the typography effectively address a particular target audience and / or support the central message or theme of the design? Etc. Try to identify the font used if possible.
You may photograph or scan the designs, or find them on the internet. Give credit for where you found the designs.


Cool site: http://www.thecoolhunter.co.uk/ads

Express More With A Touch:

The first image I chose to analyze is an advertisement for Nintendo DS touch.



http://inxiaonia.deviantart.com/art/Nintendo-Ads-69780051

The typography for this ad looks hand drawn with a pen. This is perfect because they are advertising a product that uses a digital pen. The ad is covered in black and red ink which ads to this creative/artsy theme. Creativity doesn’t follow rules such as consistency in font size and position. The letters are slanted and squished together at one end.
This typography is effective and definitely speaks to its creative young target audience.


The Living Dead:

The second image I chose is a student’s assignment which required an oxymoron with image to support.



http://jfashner.deviantart.com/art/Oxymoron-Typography-study-993747

The reason I was pulled to this image is because it is simple. The Giant “DEAD” looks like it is underground/buried. I think the image isn’t necessary but mostly because I’m not sure what it’s representing. The use of the hunters for the “I”’ is effective though. I also enjoy the word “DEAD” in the big “D”. The black and white contrast/appose each other as well. Good typography always includes the CRAP principles too.
The typography is good, but not great. I'm really not sure what the message or the target audience is. The student should have come up with a target audience and clear concept and then figured out how to incorporate an oxymoron.


The Prestige quote:

The Second Act is Called the Turn
The Magician Takes Something Ordinary
And Turns It into Something
Extra Ordinary



http://bella-elizabetta.deviantart.com/art/Prestige-Typography-2-98956040

I love the look of this image. Every few words are in a different type and size. The “look” is very old time circus. It looks aged and is in black which is appropriate with the time period it is supposedly written in.
The word “TURN” has playing card suits on it.
The type at the top and bottom are very similar, which is good use of repetition.
Another use of repetition is “takes something” and “turns it into something” are the same type.
“Ordinary” is in a type which looks ordinary to me because it is relatively simple type.
The giant “&” is brilliant. The size of it reflects the size of the word “Turn”. Both “turn” and “&” make me pause for a second after I read them because I put more focus in them. for example, if “into” was in a huge font the flow wouldn’t work as well.
The centered alignment of the poster makes it obvious that the words are the only focus of the image.

This image is effective because it reflects the style of the movie from which it is from and speaks to its target audience (people who have seen the movie,18-40ish market).

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Baby Fat Poster



Artist Statement
Maggie MacPherson
Oct. 7th, 09
For my Photoshop poster assignment I chose to use a topic I am passionate about, vegetarianism. I wanted to be specific, so I chose milk, and the negative health effects it has on people, specifically children. I chose a target audience of women, 18-35, especially those who may be pregnant or already have young children. This is because it is much easier for younger people to change their way of thinking about milk than it is for older people. Pregnant women and mothers are much more likely to educate themselves on the truth about milk because they are responsible not only for their own heath but for that of their child as well.
The process of creating the poster taught me a lot about Photoshop. I spent a long time playing around and discovering different choices I could make. I wanted to keep it simple, focused, and yet informative. Some of my drafts had a lot of excess information that made the poster look too busy and complicated.
I started off by resizing the picture of my roommates friends baby, Josh, so that it would fit the poster size of 8x10 inches. Then I used the polygonal lasso to cut out the baby and paste it onto the blank background of my poster. The baby already had a questioning expression on his face but I wanted to exaggerate it so I distorted the eyebrows by moving his inner eyebrows up a little. I wanted color to make the poster more attractive so I selected the eyes with the magic wand and changed the color of them to blue by using color balance.
I created a black background and chose white lettering. I made sure I used CRAP. White and black are my favorite contrasting colors because they are simple and effective. I know people are going to want to know more so I put the website in blue lettering against a white strip so it would stand out against the white lettering on black background. I repeated the color white, as well as the color blue in his eyes and the CTA at the bottom of the poster. I played around with the alignment until I found positions which were as pleasing to look at as possible, and I made sure none of them covered Josh’s face or were too close to each other.
I learnt how to adjust the fonts kerning’s and other aspects such as covering parts of the feet in the word “got” until I found a look that I thought resembled the “Got Milk” campaign as much as possible. I used drop shadows to make the words more visible on the lighter parts of the poster.
I faced quite a few challenges when creating this poster. My first challenge was coming up with an original idea. I had started a CD cover and almost finished before I realized I didn’t like it and had a much better idea. The CD cover was taking forever and didn’t look very good at all. It looked this way because I didn’t know what the CD cover was about, who it was for, or why I was doing it. Once I came up with a focused concept, everything became much easier. My biggest challenge after that was making sure the poster wasn’t too wordy or busy looking. I deleted a lot of statistics and quotes that crowded the page and made the message unclear.
In conclusion, I am happy with the outcome and hope that my message interests people enough to check out the website and learn more for themselves. Most of all, I am happy to know I can create an image which grabs attention while also looking professional.