Lecture

For Type in Motion. Motion as a series of time-specific events

Specifically: Motion is the illusion of sequential images. The more images, the smoother the motion. The shorter the duration of the image OR the greater the number of images in a sequence, the slower it appears to be moving (the converse is also true). Images can also appear to be moving if their density is altered.

Technical

  • Read how to make a GIF animation in Photoshop. There are many, many YT vids on how to do this. It’s easy. Here’s the one from ADOBE: https://youtu.be/omdfcGYEqPY

Preparation 

  • Online, look up the work of Eadweard Muybridge.
  • Select a large-size of one his sequential images and have it printed.
  • Cut out the Images and assemble them to make an animated flip book. 

Session 1

  • Decide on how to make a moving type animation: storyboard an animation by tracing the ligature on the sheet from Week 7 (or make a new sheet from another ligature) and work through its motion to combine, its alpha value, or some other form of time-based evolution.
  • Alternately, you can make cutouts of your letters and move them around a sheet of paper, making rough tracings that you’ll later transfer to layers in Photoshop. But, for now, just work on paper.

Homework

  • Continue to refine the design on the animation, point it by hand. Cut out the cels an assemble to make a flip book.

Session 2

  • Critique of the hand-drawn flip book.

Homework

  • Bring the animation into the computer. Make a color chart for the animation, if you want, or change the alpha (density), or keep in bxw. The images can rotate, change size, combine, or move around the image plane

Resources

https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/07/eadweard-muybridge/483381/
https://youtu.be/2wnOpDWSbyw
https://youtu.be/YIJVgo5PI24.
https://youtu.be/WnrHAUfvzyI
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