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This is what's inside the Model Radio shop - if you can get in (it's only open between 1 and 3pm approx). The lady is the owner's wife - she told me they bought the shop in 1970 and that she is 82 years old.
just a couple of 20 min sessions as we start late on the first day of new pose and the model had to leave early.
I liked the bright setup - red background and lime green chair.
Photographer- Tania Qureshi
Professional Make-up artist- Shabanoo Rahimi
Klinik Jagbeauty - Jagruti Mukhawala
Scarf Stylist - Özlem (ellma)
© "All rights are reserved" worldwide by Tania Qureshi. Please do not use the picture without permission
Here is a shot of the lovely model that Canon had at their open house this past Saturday. They had the model with a three light set up that you could shoot with the new Canon Speedlite and controller. Very nice. I'm glad that Canon finally have come up with the Radio Controlled system. It will be much easier than the old line of sight.
Overall this project went much better than I thought it would, as 3D modelling and animating is definitely not my strong part of Digital Art. I much prefer creating drawings with a tablet using Photoshop.
Positives:
The model shows accurate similarity to Stewie from Family guy through proportions and scaling, which is good as the viewer can clearly see who is portraying the villain from The Walking Dead.
The Rig is effective and works well with the animation itself. Everything that needs to work with it works, to a reasonable extent. It's basic but gets the job done.
The expressions made are clear and allow the viewer to understand how the character is expressing their feelings in the animation. The animation itself is of relative accuracy, if the animation and the actual scene from The Walking Dead were side by side, there would be at least some sort of similarity.
Negatives:
The model still feels a little unpolished, maybe spending more time on edge loops, especially with the body could have helped this. I think it's because of the mouth, I didn't pay much attention to the mouth which is probably why some of the animation doesn't look accurate to the audio. Better timekeeping with the project could have made this a lot easier improving my model.
Another negative with the model is the rig itself, although it works well with the animation I couldn't seem to get it to be as effective as it should have been.
The rendering itself went alright, however, some of the audio didn't match the animation so I had to mess with some of the animation afterwards, which resulted in it being low FPS unfortunately. Next time paying attention to the graph editor in Maya and using accurate keyframes would solve this.
For future reference, time keeping and sticking to the calendar that I created would have made this project a lot smoother than it was. Rushing certain parts that needed more time and effort, and taking longer on parts that didn't need much attention made it a lot harder for me to meet the deadline with a polished project.
Relating back to my original storyboard, I had plans to show the character stepping down from a ladder to show a hint of comedy as well as the character walking away. But due to not being able to fix the IK's on the leg as stated earlier, I had to simplify the animation due to attempting to fix the legs was taking up a large amount of time.
Only about a half-century-old when I took this Model T Ford's picture in upper NY. The owner is changing the tire. Scan of a '59 slide.
Ethnocentrism
model: brent chua (ford)
styling: reize
mua: iffah (cosmoprof)
hair: malcolm (toni&guy nyc)
Russian model
Hair: Jane Mia Hairdressing
MUA: Close Up Professional Makeup
Photographer: Raphael (Li) Chan
Photo shoot with Alexis (MM# 1858642). Makeup by Cindy Star (MM #2136483). Lighting was with two Alien Bee 800s with standard reflectors to camera right and slightly behind the model to the left.
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