Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Last Quarter Productions


My final for my 2D Production class with Prof. Scott Wright 
(better quality video here: https://vimeo.com/61845755)


My final for my History of Animation class with Prof. McGowan. This one I worked on with a group since we only had two weeks to put it together. I was in charge of organization and making the flash puppets/animating the flash puppets. My friends created some of the other assets, roughed in some things for the puppet placement, did all the motion media stuff, narrated, and did a bit of animation/painting on things that weren't puppets. For the amount of time that we had to do it in, I think it turned out pretty well. :) 
(better quality video here: https://vimeo.com/61839263)


Piano Recital Poster


A commission I did for my friend's piano recital. She'll be adding the words herself so I got to just draw and have fun! :)  

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Backgrounds Before Swine



These are the backgrounds for the short pig themed film I'm creating in my 2D production class. I like to play with the flatness of things and experiment with hard shapes that maybe aren't so literal. I'm pretty happy with how these turned out. Backgrounds aren't my speciality, but I really want to get better at them. They just define so much of a film's tone.


Friday, February 22, 2013

The Liver Song


A project I never quite got around to completing, but that I thought was fun none-the-less. The audio is Graham Chapman from Monty Python.

Here were some design ideas:














Thursday, February 14, 2013

Happy Valentines Day!


A play off of the Skype logo. My boyfriend and I have been in a long distance relationship for over a year now and Skype plays a big role in easing the pain of being away. I love that guy. :)

Happy Valentines Day everyone! 

*EDIT Below was my gift to him. He got his box so I can put it up now. Who doesn't love a good Zelda Valentine? 


Sunday, February 10, 2013

Character Evolution

So I've been writing stories and coming up with characters for quite some time. Not all my characters have stuck with me over the years. There are more than a few who I work with once and we end up parting ways shortly after. While I have characters older than the ones pictured here, these guys have kind of stuck with me the longest. They aren't just in one or two sketchbooks, but rather spaced through out a great many. They've followed my artistic development and in a lot of ways pushed me to develop. I was looking through my old sketchbooks during winter break and thought it was neat to see how I've improved since my first few drawings of these guys. 

Just to give you some background: The story of these guys was that Earth had experienced a massive pandemic that wiped out a large percentage of the human population. Scientists found a way to combat the disease by splicing a person's DNA with some kind of animals. Doing this saved the human race, but it was latter discovered that the altering of DNA made it impossible for humans to breed anymore. The characters below are a part of an organization founded by the world government to try and find either a means to reverse the process or a way for the human race to repopulate. The bad guys (the tiger lady and the wolf guy) work for groups that want to stop the government because they believe this to be the next stage in human evolution or mankind's reckoning. The dog guy and fox girl are scientists while the cat girl is their body guard from people like the tiger lady. 

The summary above makes it sound a little better than when I first thought of it in the 8th grade. I was watching a lot of anime at the time so a bunch of the characters and story lines ended up mimicking much of what I was exposed to. Plus I was in that "depressed teen" stage, so some of the characters were really only there to cry and talk about their "dark past".

Maybe one day I'll be able to really sit down and hash out the whole thing into something cohesive. After how long they've been with me, they kind of deserve it.


*edit: all of the ones in color were done in 9th grade, not 8th