Thursday, October 27, 2011

The Basic Elements- Animation

 Tone (Fullmetal Alchemist): There is sense of danger and evil in this screenshot as dark toned shadow creature surrounds most of the space while only a small amount of light is present around the grey armored victim. The tone works to convey evil and darkness making it clear the shadow like being with numerous eyes is a monster or an antagonist. This is done with an absence of light, dark borders, and the position of the characters. The image has very little light and is dominated by dark black borders enveloping most space while the grey character space composed of gray and some light to help highlight him. Tone helps the viewer's get a clear idea of what is going on in the image as dark tones dominate the space of the image and appears to be consuming everything including the small portion of light. Using tone the audience has a clear visual of a seemingly evil being about to consume light/good. Evil triumphs over good in this case.

 Movement (K-On): Coneys multiple moments(the character's limb appearing in different spaces like movement) in the time of a single frame making a character appear as though they are crawling quickly on the floor. Movement in the image serves to make a static character appear like they are in motion like they are alive or animated. The character is actually still but by having he limbs drawn in different poses, shapes, lengths, etc. in one drawing gives the audience the idea she is a live person moving or to be specific crawling on the floor headed forward.
Line (Casshern Sins): The bold lines active in this image serve to help bring out other elements in the character like texture, shape, color, etc.. Naturally the line make up the structure of the drawing, but there are many different directions and boldness of lines to draw the audience's attention/eyes. Ringo (the girl) has many bold and curvy lines that work to focus her face giving a clear outlining of its structure. Also using curved  face and wavy lined hair helps to convey Ringo's feminine features. Ringo's lines serve to outline her structure while distinguishing her other visual features. 

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Visual Thinking Exercise


 The left one is my visual puzzle and the one on the right was my friend's. I used lines to mark snakes on my puzzle and tried filling in lines to complete the connection of the snakes. My friend numbered each snake and connected each whole snake to connect them from beginning to end. I picked the green as the shortest because it looked like there were less lines connected to me. My friend picked the red one as the shortest, he figured this out by connecting curves of each snake and found out the red one was correct. So the goal was to find which snake pattern was shortest using pattern seeking techniques like filling in, finding, matching, categorizing, completion, etc. I think I only really used filling in and categorization while my friend used most of the pattern seeking techniques which led him to the correct conclusion.



















The puzzle on the left is my friends and the one on the right is mine. Neither of us got the right number of triangles (20), but I managed to get 19. I think my friend has better visual memory than me because I felt I had trouble with the snakes puzzle but this one was much simpler for me. I think also I did not have to use matching and categorizing as much for this one either since all the shapes in the puzzle are triangular. This puzzle was just a matter of finding all triangles which was easier for me since this one relied more counting. My friend did not seem to use filling-in patterns which is probably why he missed seeing many of the larger triangles. I however did use the filling-in visual and managed to get most of them, except one which I may have simply overlooked. It was interesting to see how my friend and I did the same puzzles yet yielded different results because of out differences in visual thinking and observation abilities. 

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Visual Perception 2-Feature Hierarchy

Adventure Time With and Jake Title Card
created by Pendleton Ward

I have a product development concentration and am interested in designing for animation or a related field. I felt this related to the topic of feature hierarchy as this title is like a cover for the show with lots of colors to draw the eyes. The show's title is in bold red letters and has a sword sticking through it giving instant audience attention focused on the name. First the name is written out in red big font letters with a sword with a gleaming appearance adding a sense of 3D to make the title pop out more. Also, Fin (the human boy in blue clothes) and Jake (the dog) are right underneath the creator's credit and despite their size they manage to visually stand out because of their bright colors in a dark background. What stands out the most in this title cards have bright colors which stands above size or shape in terms of visual hierarchy. Although the show's title also pops out more as opposed to the two characters below may also be because it is in such large font and it has its own space that allow clear focus on it. Overall I felt this was a good example of my interests and the class topic. 

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Top Down Visualizing Processing

This image is a fan art rendering of the animated show "South Park" that seemed like a good example of top down visual processing. The image is rendered in a very different art style than the show itself and its goal is to  display various South Park characters in this form. Another goal is that this image acts as fan tribute for all sorts of characters, even obscure ones. Finding certain characters in this art style may be difficult due to the vast difference of the show's actual cheap appearance to this much more visually appealing drawing of the show. Aside from having various character, the image has everyone in different clothing and are in different poses. A viewer's eye might be instantly drawn to the top where there are 4 enlarged characters and a bright light. There is so much going on with all the characters, yet there is a certain order. The goal is really a visual tribute to the shows, the artist showing off their fandom for the series in an manga style while clearly putting the show's logo to avoid confusion. First time looker's eyes might move all over the picture and try to recognize their favorite characters in mange style.