Wednesday, May 13, 2009

FINAL PROJECT. FULL CREDITS AND TITLES.


     The time has finally come.  The project is finished.  "Mr. Cupcakes" is now equipped with a delicious set of credits and titles.  It was a lot of hard work and time spent in those dark editing rooms, but I think it turned out alright.  I reviewed with the director last week and touched base with her yesterday to iron out the last details.  The music is by Monk Turner, you can check him out at http://www.myspace.com/monkturner.  Kinda cute, kinda cheezy, & kinda funky.  

     While working on this project, I realized I really loved doing titles.  After Effects can make things super convenient, but it is also all about timing.  Working with textures made the project more appealing to work with, constantly figuring out tricks to making things seem more authentic, or convincing.  The birds are flash animations, and every layer is on a mode with a texture effect.  I especially enjoy hearing the story of a film first and then finding a creative way to playfully introduce it.  For this storyline, a chunk was shot in New York, hence the NYC Skyline, Subway Map, etc.  The other part of the script is a story about a baker, hence the cake, dripping eggs, and of course, the cupcake!  

I hope you guys enjoy it, it has been an incredible semester and I've learned so much.  So thank you class, thank you Maru, and thank you Ben Bays!  Feedback on this sequence is totally welcome, there is always room for improvement.  

FINAL SCREENING FOR "MR CUPCAKES" (2009) DIRECTED BY ANGELA CHEN WILL BE HELD AT THE ALAMO DRAFTHOUSE (S. LAMAR) THIS SUNDAY FROM 1PM-4PM with the other undergraduate thesis screenings.  More Info: http://rtf.utexas.edu/eoss_spring09.html


Final Project on Vimeo:
(You may have to stretch your window out, it's rather large)




Farewell!

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Final Project Update

I am 50% done and pushing through the rest.  We had a change in the script and I had to rework and resketch an entirely new project for the Mister Cupcakes titles sequence.  However, the change in script has given me a lot more to work with creatively because the opening scenes will now be filmed in New York City.   

Out of about 7 scenes, I have completed 4.  Most of it is coming out really nicely, and I am finding all sorts of cool things just playing around the effects tab in After Effects.  I am predominately creating layers from scratch or looking at pictures and composing them in Adobe Illustrator.  I've been importing the project into AE.  

To Do List:
1) Last three scenes
2) Better transitions between the two
3) Audio and Formatting
4) Review with Director

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

FINAL PROJECT UPDATE #1: MISTER CUPCAKES OPENING TITLES



(I drew this mock up in Adobe Illustrator)

Pitch - A VERY brief, opening title sequence to Angela Chen's "dramedy", "Mister Cupcakes". Titles must be under 45 seconds, we do not want to make the viewer wait too long. The short film was beautifully done on 16 mm. I’d like to preserve this quality and integrate animation on top of this background to avoid an overly “flash animation” aesthetic. 

Proposal - The opening title sequence will take you on a baker's journey-incorporating three splattered eggs, spilt water, a whisk, and a mustached cupcake freshly baked out of hot oven.  This may be layered above camera pans of the competing bakeries’ “war plans” that I drew for the set:

Asset List - Mister Cupcakes Voice Audio (to be recorded with the director), Mister Cupcakes Music (currently being composed), Clips from Film, Dimensions, Frame Rate (23.98 fps), Adobe Illustrator Mister Cupcakes Character Layers, Adobe After Effects CS4, Flash CS4, Mister Cupcakes FONT (Tweedy_ERC_01), Actors and Actress Names, Producer and Director's Names, etc. (in order of importance)

Storyboard - a skeleton storyboard currently residing in my sketchbook:

Scene 1: Silhouette of rising cupcake in a hot glowing oven. Camera zooms out from cupcake wrapper fibers to bring the outside of oven into frame.

Scene 2: The oven door swings up and slams, and the Mister Cupcakes Titles manifest into the oven window (written in steam)

Scene 3: 1st cracked egg falls and splatters on the stage and actor 1’s name rolls over

CRACKED EGG REFERENCE FOOTAGE:

http://www.wonderhowto.com/how-to/video/how-to-crack-an-egg-with-one-hand-147717/

Transition: War plan, treasure map dash marks…lead to next egg

Scene 4: 2nd cracked egg falls and splatters on the stage and actor 2’s name rolls over,

Scene 5: 3rd cracked egg falls and splatters on the stage and actor 3’s name rolls over, submerge Mr. Yo underwater. (luma matte, opacity effect)

Scene 6: Written, Produced, and Directed by Angela Chen.

Scene 7: Insert “DING” audio to indicate the cupcake is finished baking, reveal dressed Mister Cupcakes. Close up on eyes, mouth, and mustache on Mister Cupcakes character, camera follows each body part.  Ends with Mister Cupcakes wiggling his nose and mustached, fades to black. 

A more refined storyboard that I just completed:

Schedule - Class Project Due Dates: Wednesday, May 6th.  Must be done by May 9th (Mister Cupcakes Deadline)

Got two weeks to crank this baby out:

Week 1: Acquire assets, finalize storyboard, finalize character design, begin animation

Week 2: Sound, camera angles, incorporate footage, meet with director another time before we send it off!

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Assignment #9: Green Screen! And Little Men at Breakfast.

    
     Green screen is fantastic, however it can get pretty arduous at the same time.  I combined a good amount of the footage we gathered in class to create this little man breakfast scene.  The background and scene objects were all tweaked in photoshop and then imported into AE.  Using Keylight and the Matte Choker, I adjusted the 6 videos and synched them up so that they could be relatively believable together.   
     I definitely had to sketch out the setting and pacing in my head a number of times because at some point in time in each video, the subject leaves frame and I didn't want the subject to walk out in mid air after it was keyed out (unless I put that video in between two objects, like I did with the video in between the toaster and the ketchup bottle)  There are so many more things I'd like to learn- especially some settings that could help keying out hair, skin tones, lighting, etc.  

Here is it!  Little Men at Breakfast.  The file was very large so I had to export it at a lower quality setting to upload onto Vimeo at its 500MB limit.  Beware, it's a lil' grainy.


Little Men at Breakfast from Candace Lau on Vimeo.

The next couple of posts until the end of the year will be devoted to our final projects...until then!

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Assignment #8: Motion Tracking/Stabilizing on a Tomay-toe Farm

Motion Tracking is super useful.  It took me a couple tries to track the unstabilized footage well.  I tracked the big, red bucket full of tomatoes, and it began tracking the man's red hat next to it instead a few seconds in.  The tracker also freaked out a bit when the man passed by the car window, and began tracking the window instead when the bucket and window crossed paths.  However, through trial and error, I changed the feature point and tweaked the options settings (RBG, Adapt Every Feature, Enhance, Adjust X and Y, etc.) a bit and finally got something to work with!

The unstabilized footage - walking while filming, rocky, hand held camera on a Tomato farm:

The stabilized footage- stabilized, smoother, color corrected. It is pretty smooth in the first couple of seconds, hiccups a little bit towards the end:

Monday, March 23, 2009

Assignment #7: Particles. And Jellyfish.

This particle assignment was created from a Jellyfish photo I shot this break from the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago.  I took it into Photoshop for some color correction, brought it into After Effects, added a custom Distortion Effect to wiggle the Jellyfish, and added a wave-like feature.  There is also a camera zoom in addition to some water/bubble audio.

As for the particles, I added the snow particles on a solid layer to mimic sea plankton or sea sediment.  I turned down the scale, speed and number of particles, and set an opacity because they looked rather artificial.  I did the same with the bubbles, and tweaked the settings for this underwater effect.   


Jellyfish from Candace Lau on Vimeo.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Assignment #6: Text. And Crabs.


     I text animated the first scene from my new piece, "Murphy The Crab" in After Effects. It is a story about an algae-afroed, adolescent crab named Murphy who can't walk from side to side like every other crab. The fact that he can walk forwards and backwards may possibly save the entire day...or just himself.

The first video is the opening scene done with TEXT in After Effects:

The second video is the final product in Flash:

Feedback for improvement is more that welcome.