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This is one of my favorite images from the LEGO Animation Book. It consists of 9 images overlaid to show how I animated Anna waving a wand. Stop motion animation is ✨MAGIC✨

Here be links: the video, the announcement, the tubefilter article by Jenni Powell.

 

Also, check out Paul and Storm (website, twitter) who created the theme song and Greg Aronowitz (blog, twitter)

This scene was created as an opening animation segment for Dragonfly Communications.

The client wanted a "Pixar-ish" looking pond setting to open their video presentation with.

 

In the animation there are tiny dragonflys fluttering about, the water has a slight ripple to it, and the reeds and flowers are swaying in the summer breeze.

 

Copyright © 2015 by Craig Paup. All rights reserved.

Any use, printed or digital, in whole or edited is forbidden.

 

just a short animated bomb for next GAMES PEOPLE PLAY event in ddorf/germany

 

...the animation is her:

pixelkitsch.blogsport.de/2012/01/09/games-people-play-bom...

Book Photographed by Beekeeper for reference purpose

Note: to view the animation click on Actions>View All Sizes>Original size to view the animation!

 

This is a different animation made through WinJUPOS using image mapping. Don't think I like it as much as my normal animations though

ANIMATION!

PITCHING SESSIONS.

 

Fotografías Damaris Hidalgo // Ventana Sur

Nestle Quik cel for ONLY $3.25 on eBay. The market for animation cels is DEAD!

One of my favorite pieces from the Respond show at Smack Mellon Gallery. A group show of art inspired by the current events of the deaths of unarmed black men and women at the hands of law enforcement. This zoetrope spun by pulling the trigger on the toy gun and shows an animation of an unarmed man getting shot in the back.

Animation doll based off of the Disney Animator collection. This Elsa Doll is rezable in box or out of box for display as well as a holdable version. Has two voice lines, "Hi i'm olaf -giggles-" and "Go away Anna"

Wizards (1977) - Ralph Bakshi

Fairies blown away in the wind.

 

This Cell is Available in the Bakshi Shop (3/4/08)

 

Uploaded by www.RalphBakshi.com

All Rights Reserved

Tous les lundis et vendredis / Mondays and fridays at 9am

HANNA BARBERA STUDIOS

ABBOTT and COSTELLO

Original Animation TELEVISION SERIES 1967

 

Type: AWESOME Original Production Animation MODEL Drawing

from the 1967 HANNA BARBERA Animated TELEVISION SERIES

 

This is one of the original Production MODEL (Pencil Drawings) that was used to DESIGN THE ART that appeared under the camera during

the production filming of the original Television Commercial.

 

NOTE: THIS IS AN ORIGINAL; NOT A MASS PRODUCED LIMITED EDITION

 

Size: 12 field 12.5 x 10.5

Type: . Vintage Hand Drawn Art

Condition: EXCELLENT

Featuring UNCLE WOLFGANG

Date 1967

  

NOTES:

 

The Abbott and Costello Cartoon Show is an American half-hour animated series that aired in syndication from September 9, 1967 to June 1, 1968. Each of the 39 individual episodes consisted of four five-minute cartoons. [1] The cartoons were created jointly by Hanna-Barbera, RKO and Jomar Productions between 1965 and 1967. The series was syndicated by Gold Key Entertainment and King World Productions.

 

The primary feature of this cartoon series was the fact that Bud Abbott supplied the voice for his own character. (Because Lou Costello had died in 1959, his character's voice was performed by Stan Irwin.)

William (Bud) Abbott and Lou Costello (born Louis Francis Cristillo) performed together as Abbott and Costello, an American comedy duo whose work in radio, film and television made them the most popular comedy team during the 1940s and 50s. Thanks to the endurance of their most popular and influential routine, "Who's on First?"—whose rapid-fire word play and comprehension confusion set the preponderant framework for most of their best-known routines—the team is, as a result, featured in the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. (Contrary to popular belief, however, the duo was not inducted into the Hall.)

  

The team's first known radio appearance was on The Kate Smith Hour in February, 1938. "Who's on First?" was first performed for a national radio audience the following month.[1] Abbott and Costello stayed on the program as regulars for two years, but the similarities between their New Jersey-accented voices made it difficult for listeners (as opposed to stage audiences) to tell them apart due to their rapid-fire repartee. The problem was solved by having Costello affect a high-pitched childish voice, and their remaining tenure on the Smith show was successful enough to get them roles in a Broadway revue "The Streets of Paris" in 1939.

 

In 1940 they were signed by Universal Studios for the film One Night in the Tropics. Cast in supporting roles, they stole the show with several classic routines, including "Who's on First?" The same year they were a summer replacement on radio for Fred Allen. Two years later, they had their own NBC show.

 

Universal signed them to a long-term contract, and their second film, Buck Privates, (1941) made them box-office stars. In most of their films, the plot was a framework for the two comics to reintroduce comedy routines they first performed on stage. Universal also added glitzy, gratuitous production numbers (a formula borrowed from the Marx Brothers comedies) featuring The Andrews Sisters, Ted Lewis and his Orchestra, Ella Fitzgerald, and other musical acts. They made 36 films together between 1940 and 1956. Abbott and Costello were among the most popular and highest-paid entertainers in the world during World War II. Other film successes included Hold That Ghost, Who Done It?, Pardon My Sarong, The Time of Their Lives, Buck Privates Come Home, Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, and Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man.

 

In 1942, Abbott and Costello were the top box office draw with a reported take of $10 million. They would remain a top ten box office attraction until 1952.

 

In 1951, they moved to television as rotating hosts of The Colgate Comedy Hour. (Eddie Cantor and Martin and Lewis were among the others.) Each show was a live hour of vaudeville in front of a theater audience, revitalizing the comedians' performances and giving their old routines a new sparkle.

 

Beginning in 1952, a filmed half-hour series, The Abbott and Costello Show, appeared in syndication on local stations across the country. Loosely based on their radio series, the show cast the duo as unemployed wastrels. One of the show's running gags involved Abbott perpetually nagging Costello to get a job to pay their rent, while Abbott barely lifted a finger in that direction. The show featured Sidney Fields as their landlord, and Hillary Brooke as a friendly neighbor who sometimes got involved in the pair's schemes. Another semi-regular was Joe Besser as Stinky, a 40-year-old sissy dressed in a Little Lord Fauntleroy suit. Gordon Jones was Mike the cop, who always lost patience with Lou. The simple plotlines were often merely an excuse to recreate old comedy routines—including "Who's on First?" and other familiar set pieces—from their films and burlesque performances

 

Sketch done in Python Processing. Loopable animation, 60 fps video. Done using P3D, looking down over two arrays of regularly spaced cubes displaced on the z-axis. Used ffmpeg to stitch the frames into a video.

 

(Downloading and viewing in VLC with looping turned on should show the full looped animation)

For my Blog I'm planning a CSS3-animated bookshelf. The video doesn’t run fluently. The animation does. It also works well in less-capable browsers.

 

So, it’s eventually online and you can find it at christophzillgens.com/en/books/.

 

University Project - To create an animation with photographic, drawn and collaged elements. My concept behind my animation was to create a bizarre and surreal take on everyday routines (such as drinking coffee and watching the ducks in the river outside my kitchen window) by combining them.

View my art at Imagekind:

NWExposures.imagekind.com

 

This is an animated gif file. To see the animation, click on "All sizes" and then click on Original. It is about 4 mb in size and will take a while to load depending on your connection speed.

 

The animation is created with permission using a photo made by dozier.donald at: www.flickr.com/photos/24242458@N06/2957851019/

Gif animation of bench falls on Sunbeam Creek at Mt. Rainier, Washington State

Tous les jours à 9h30 / Everyday at 9.30am / Elke dag om 9:30.

OSIRIS-REx Mission Design: Earth Return Animations

 

On September 24, 2023, OSIRIS-REx will return its sample of asteroid Bennu to Earth. The sample return capsule will detach from the spacecraft, perform an entry, descent and landing sequence, and touch down at the UTTR facility in Utah. The Bennu samples will be taken to Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas for curation, and will be studied by scientists around the world for decades to come.

 

Animation credit: NASA Goddard's Scientific Visualization Studio

 

For the OSIRIS-REx Mission Design: Earth Return Animations visit: svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/20257

 

Book Photographed by Beekeeper for reference purpose

Dali & Disney collaborated to make a short film animation. Yes, THAT Dali and THAT Disney.

 

From wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Destino

 

"Destino is a short animated cartoon released in 2003 by The Walt Disney Company. Destino is unique in that its production originally began in 1945, 58 years before its original release. The project was a collaboration between American animator Walt Disney and Spanish painter Salvador Dalí, and features music written by Mexican songwriter Armando Dominguez.

 

Destino was storyboarded by Disney studio artist John Hench and Dalí for eight months in late 1945 and 1946; however, financial concerns caused Disney to cease production. The Walt Disney Company, then Walt Disney Studios, was plagued by many financial woes in the World War II era. Hench compiled a short animation test of about 18 seconds in the hopes of rekindling Disney's interest in the project, but the production was no longer deemed financially viable and put on indefinite hiatus.

 

In 1999, Walt Disney's nephew Roy Edward Disney, while working on Fantasia 2000, unearthed the dormant project and decided to bring it back to life."

Animation based on 9 raw images, processed in PS CS4 for animation rendering.

Cropped and bleached ;-)

Glíma Competition (named Bikarglíma Íslands) hosted by The Icelandic Glíma Association held in Íþróttahús Kennaraháskólans, Laugardalur, Reykjavik, Iceland - January 2017

Animation of a set of 19 micrographs of a trio of chondrules in a thin-sectioned specimen of the Allende Meteorite, using cross-polarized light. Typical frame is Allende 5846 in this same set. Click All Sizes to see the animation run.

 

Field of view is about 2mm actual size.

 

Photographed with a DSLR attached to a petrographic microscope.

 

The Allende meteorites fell in 1969 at Pueblito de Allende, Mexico.

Made a gif of the lightning we are having tonight, i thought it was wicked cool xD!

Tokyo Dome One piece Event !

Was amazing ! a lot of people !

check out my blog of my life in Japan arihelminen.wordpress.com/

One Man's Dream, Disney's Hollywood Studios

Short animation of Callisto moving behind Jupiter between 22:00 and 22:19 GMT on the evening of 9th December

As part of Design Depot at Harvest Workroom. I matched the left over bits and pieces.

The idea behind this was something along the lines of, guy finds a remote control that controls absolutely every electrical thing, then uses it to drive another man insane.

However, thanks to the ever so lovely uni deadlines, it ended up just being an animation of a guy finding a remote control in some box and finding it fascinating that it controls a blender and some DVD players. w00t....

 

This was finished over a period of 3 days where it's all I did (the half with the conversation and walk in was done over 2 weeks, ages ago). It's so jerky as I didn't have time to do all the frames I needed to. I finished it off this morning after getting just 2 hours sleep inbetween filming it, then charging the battery of my camera after an hour.

The sound isn't great quality... but I'm no studio lady. The voices are done by Matt Dayton (he is not mattness) as he is a great voice person of great voice ways, I shall be bugging him to do it again :P. Unfortunately I had to use my own voice at times when putting all the sound in this morning as the whooole animation is basically completely different to my script as they didn't give us enough time to do both animations well AND the essay.

 

*breaths*

 

Oh yeah, sorry it's orange and just photographed, I had no time to scan it and photoshop it either.

 

Ah ok, it's generally just piss poor... but here, you can watch it anyway :P

 

Plus, how many times does that guy morph into someone else in just a minute? XD

The Animation Decathlon is a unique interactive arts installation combining cutting edge architectural projections, outdoor video gaming and original sound design in the courtyard of Kensington Town Hall.

 

The event is the culmination of a year long project working with children and young people across Kensington and Chelsea to create a fantastic series of 2012 - inspired drawings and animations. Click here to find out more about the project

 

On Saturday 21 March, the animated athletes and crowds they’ve created will be projected metres high onto the Town Hall and surrounding buildings where they will sprint, pole vault and swim across the sides of the buildings transforming the area into an ‘Olympic’ arena.

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