Following up with my previous blahg post, here is the original storyboard animatic that I put together for TED-Ed. Next time I'll write more on how I got from this to the final animated short!
Monday, January 21, 2013
Friday, January 18, 2013
What Was I Animating 10 Years Ago?
Everybody starts somewhere.
A couple months back I was cleaning house and going thru some old stacks of CD-R's... or as our kids will call them, "SPINDLES OF WORTHLESS DISCS"... and came across an old archive of some college projects. Exactly how far have we come in ten years? I was still laying this sh*t off to VHS! Look at those tracking problems! Do most people even remember tracking?
... but I digress, please enjoy these four animation exercises from back when multi-plane animation wasn't just adding another layer in After Effects. I did these for Lisa Barcy's Stop Motion 1 class at Columbia College Chicago -- the first project featured on the video was the first proper stop-motion I ever shot! Yikes.
Have a great weekend everybody!
A couple months back I was cleaning house and going thru some old stacks of CD-R's... or as our kids will call them, "SPINDLES OF WORTHLESS DISCS"... and came across an old archive of some college projects. Exactly how far have we come in ten years? I was still laying this sh*t off to VHS! Look at those tracking problems! Do most people even remember tracking?
... but I digress, please enjoy these four animation exercises from back when multi-plane animation wasn't just adding another layer in After Effects. I did these for Lisa Barcy's Stop Motion 1 class at Columbia College Chicago -- the first project featured on the video was the first proper stop-motion I ever shot! Yikes.
Have a great weekend everybody!
Thursday, January 17, 2013
PEMDAS: The Process, Part I
I've recently posted some pre-production goodness over on my site for my TED-Ed animated short, PEMDAS or How To Defeat a Dragon with Math (YouTube). I wanted to take some time in this blog to walk thru how I go about making a project for TED-Ed from start to finish. It may not be the model way to do things but it gets the job done, son! Overall the whole process from pre-production to final posting takes anywhere between a month and a month and a half.
To get things started, TED sends me an audio file -- sometimes of my choosing, sometimes not -- and from there I begin listening to it over and over annnnd over. I'll listen to it while I'm on the train, in the shower, grocery shoppin, etc etc so I can start brainstorming ideas & listening for workable rhythms in the narration. I rarely cut up the audio, to whatever benefit or downsides that may provide. Mainly I don't do it because I'd rather present the material as how it may play out in someone's head during a lecture. Plus I don't need it to be any longer than it already is, I have a lot of ground to cover in a short time. Initially, I start sorting out what could make for funny sight gags and what the characters might look like.
And then I let my brain crap all over my notebook for a few days, like this.
![]() |
| The scribble at the bottom eventually became the last shot in the animation of the desert. |
![]() |
| First dragon drawings |
![]() |
| Working out how I wanted to represent the musketeers |
![]() |
| Fleshing out the dragon, if time permitted I was originally aiming to make him much more complicated. |
![]() |
| More musketeer work where I decided on making parentheses 'just arms' |
Ahhh... wasn't that refreshing to get that all out? I'm always jealous of some of my artist friends who keep amazingly well-kept sketchbooks full of beautiful drawings and proportion studies. Mine looks like a four-year-old's with randomly fleshed-out drawings peppered in...
Due to the compressed nature of my TED-Ed productions (i.e. just me & producer) I usually start on storyboarding before or during initial character design, so my animatics typically end up looking nothing like the final product. Certain parts will get chopped up, reworked or removed altogether. This is true of all my TED-Ed projects but especially this latest one, with a much higher concentration of character interactions and backgrounds than my first two, which had long spans of charts and text animation.
Here are a few select storyboards and screenshots to compare storyboard vs. the final product:
![]() |
| My original design for the imperial senate. The robot things were ... just that. Overall, it looked too small and confined for me in the end. |
![]() |
| The original "PEMDAS! There's another spot!" ... I wasn't really sure who I wanted to have yelling that line out so I just made a generic person. The mouth was fun to draw. |
![]() |
| The final version of the musketeers riding their steeds. |
.... to be continued!
TOMORROW: What Was I Animating 10 Years Ago?
MONDAY: The Animatic!
NEXT WEEK: The Process, Part II
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
TED-Ed: PEMDAS
I'll be posting more behind-the-scenes whatnots for this and other TED-Ed work shortly, and probably some sorta nipples for good measure.
Friday, January 11, 2013
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
VH1's 100 Sexiest Artists!
... mmm-MMMM! Just in time for Thanksgiving we as a people can finally come together to celebrate not just the gifted or "talented" artists, but the 100 SEXIEST ARTISTS. Check out the short animation above (credits) that I worked on & for more of Malika Favre's excellent work go here! I haven't seen the show on TV but I can make a few guesses as to who they may have picked for their top 100:
1. Shirtless Picasso ... obviously.
2. Ann Romney
3. Billy Zane as The Phantom
4. James Quall
5. Courtney Stodden
6. Mama Berenstain Bear
7. Young Tim Meadows
8. Robocop Action Figure w/ Battle Damage
9 - 100. Grace Kelly, because my goodness!
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Thursday, November 1, 2012
NEW TED-Ed Animation - Electoral College
I just finished up my latest project with TED-Ed about everyone's favorite least-controversial subject of The Electoral College. It's free, buddy!
Special thanks to my lovely producer Bridgette Spalding and the handsome sound designer Eric Hoffman.
Labels:
animation,
character design,
design,
freelance,
TED,
vector work,
work
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Monday, October 1, 2012
More TED-Ed in the Works
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

























