Just wanted to Share this animation because it’s a great example of simple animation loops and how effective they can be. Subtle or fluid loops of simple actions is really all we have time for in 33 frames.
The animator, Daniel Britt from the UK was featured on It’s Nice That Graduates 2009.
Her name is Holga. She does beautiful things to people. Unashamedly cheap and easy to handle. A bit clunky around the edges and with no intention to hang around forever. Most importantly, the lady won’t say no too a little duct tape. She’s my plastic, french, fire engine red lomography camera and my current infatuation.
For the un-acquainted Lomography, is a type of analogue photography that recognizes the short comings of the medium and turns them into strengths. The holga, a flagship model for lomography, was designed in China to be a cheap, toy like camera that american photography students could use to get acquainted with medium format film. The end result was a truly terrible plastic lens camera, with limited features, that somehow captured a whole new spectrum of exciting imagery.
It’s not a hobby for everyone. Expensive materials, with inconsistent results and a strong stylistic look. Not to mention, luck being just as important as skill. Though, it is a great way to understand the basics of photography, and alot of teachers promote it as a way of seeding ideologies about how to approach your shots.
Fundamentally, I just love how this product steps aside of the standard consumers expectations like expensive SLRs, megapixels and Photoshop and offers something so confidently different, refreshing and unique. I mean, we are talking polar opposites here- it’s cheaper to make the camera, than it is to buy and process the film you use in it.
So, as you may of guessed, Lomography is just absolutely fascinating to me. I’d love to see if a product or push could happen in the ravaged music industry which could drag avid listeners in a new and refreshing direction, abandoning or evaluating all the old expectations and hindrances, as Lomography has done for Photography.
Anyway, I’ve got my first few rolls of film that I’m waiting to get developed. Lets see how my love affair goes then. Somehow, regardless of the results though- I can see my Holga stringing me along for quite sometime. Such is lomo love.
http://www.lomography.com/
A rotoscoped medley of deep ideas and philosophic though, Waking Life is a crafted experience that discuss individuals and ideas within the context of Dreams. And for the audaciously pretentious, such as myself- the standard rainy day material. It’s a hard film to express, and slightly trickier to understand. It’s fodder for the Bedroom philosopher, or for those who just enjoy arduous AM debates with an empty case and a bunch of mates.
If I can just digress, Rotoscope seems to give creators and subsequent animators a great deal of help when establishing tones about perception and reality, as you would of seen in the recent Scanner Darkly. Actually now that I think about it, most of the best dream sequences I’ve seen have been animated (Disney) , which I guess speaks volumes about the expressiveness and potential of the medium. Anyway, the rotoscope, unifies the ebb and flow, brings forward focus and hyphens one impressive observation with the next.
Anyways, get the D’s about it here and check it out here.