Careers in Animation:More Than Just Pen and Paper

Article Source : Animation School Review

The realm of commercial animation is as diverse as the styles and techniques of animation itself. These days, animators can find work in feature films, television, the Internet, CD-ROM production, as well as product design/visualization, architecture, and interior design. And within each of those industries, animators can perform a variety roles.

In a future article, we’ll discuss some of those varied industries but, for now, we’ll go over a few d

2-D Animator

2-D Animation may sound old-fashioned in a day and age when computers are everywhere and 3-D animation has taken Hollywood by storm, but 2-D animation continues to be an expanding and popular medium — especially since classical 2-D skills are the foundation for most 3-D work. 2-D animators develop their skills through life drawing, composition, and perspective courses — studying proportion, line of action, structure, and basic anatomy — while working in areas as varied as animation, character design, clean-up, doping, modeling, slugging, and storyboarding.

3-D Animator

3-D animators are occupied with many of the same considerations at their 2-D counterparts — computers don’t get rid of the need for skills in life drawing, concept drawing, composition, character design, etc. 3-D animators will also deal more extensively with modeling, texturing, and lighting in a 3-D environment, often with the use of such software tools and packages as PhotoShop, SoftImage, Alias/Wavefront, Maya, and others.s

Storyboard Artist

The Storyboard Artist interprets scripts to create storyboards. This usually means planning shots, visualize the story before drawing it, and being careful to maintain continuity among the shots. Starting out on this career track as an assistant, you’ll typically start out by doing clean-up and revisions, eventually working up to preparing some parts of the story board under supervision. This work involves a lot of cutting and pasting, drawing and quick sketching, perspective and composition, and perhaps most importantly, story development and interpretation.

Layout Artist

The Layout Artist creates the foundation for the animation by rendering background layouts for each scene — usually referring to storyboards and additional research materials. These layouts don’t appear in the final production, but are critical for the positioning and perspective of the animation. Layouts are usually done with graphite pencil on punched animation paper; the aim is to provide a stage in which the animators will animate their characters and effects, as well as a blueprint or underdrawing, to be rendered in color by the Background Painters.

Inbetweener

Most artists enter the world of animation by starting as Inbetweeners — the artists that help the animators and animation assistants complete the action of a scene. It may not sound like much, but it’s an important step where you’ll learn the basics of animation. An inbetween is one of the transition drawings between two extreme drawings — the key drawings that distill the essence of an animated action. The inbetweens fill in the action between these key drawings. You’ll usually work in a team and learn to imitate the animator’s drawings and line quality.

ifferent career paths that a film/television animator may choose from.

Creating Visual Impact with Patterns

by Brenda Tharp , author of Creative Nature & Outdoor Photography How to take photographic advantage of patterns in nature

Article Source : Better Photo.Com 

This article is adapted from Brenda Tharp’s BetterPhoto.com online course:
Creating Visual Impact
Patterns are so prevalent in nature! They are in the design of a flower blossom, in the bark of a tree, in a spring meadow. Pattern is Nature’s attempt at organizing the randomness of itself.

But for pattern to be recognized, there must be more than three or four repetitions of shapes, colors, forms, etc. Two or three does not make for a strong pattern at all, just a grouping.

The goal with photographing patterns, in my opinion, should be to celebrate its random structure. Consider the repetition of agave leaves, or a sky filled with “cotton balls” as I like to call those wonderful cloud formations!

Pattern is strongest when it extends outside the frame, making us think that it continues. Our mind’s eye creates that expansion, giving the pattern even more strength.

Remember that true pattern doesn’t really have any direction to it.

When pattern has enough room to establish itself in your composition, it can sometimes create a visual echoing, and a rhythm is established. This happens whenever a pattern becomes smaller in the distance, and the repetitions appear closer together. The repetition of rolling sand dunes, or a boat wake, or vineyards, can all become rhythmic. As in music, though, you don’t get the rhythm from just one or two downbeats. You usually need more time to pick up on the rhythm. So it is with photography - you need “time”, or visual space, for the rhythm to develop.

Also, rhythm is not just about undulating, curving lines. It can be the repetition of telephone poles, or a forest of trees. It’s really about any structured repetition wherein some visual “beat” is established.

This article is adapted from Brenda Tharp’s BetterPhoto.com online course: Creating Visual Impact

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