It's based on the animation process of William Kentridge. it was an experimental project for school where we studied the process of a master artist. Each frame is probably a half second or so, depending on where it was in the film. I used charcoal and erasers on Rives BFK, really similar to what Kentridge does. Except he has a massive studio and I just had a classroom and a tripod. haha
i'm really interested in trying this out. Do you know resources online or books that could aid me in the process? Wouldn't a scanner work better then take a photo of it ?
how exactly did u do it? and how long do u hold each frame?
nepaligurkha 1 year ago
@nepaligurkha Thank you!!
It's based on the animation process of William Kentridge. it was an experimental project for school where we studied the process of a master artist. Each frame is probably a half second or so, depending on where it was in the film. I used charcoal and erasers on Rives BFK, really similar to what Kentridge does. Except he has a massive studio and I just had a classroom and a tripod. haha
mary05louise 1 year ago
@mary05louise
i'm really interested in trying this out. Do you know resources online or books that could aid me in the process? Wouldn't a scanner work better then take a photo of it ?
nepaligurkha 1 year ago
this is great!!
nepaligurkha 1 year ago
wow! thats so.....=O
boredpixiechick 2 years ago
wow.... thats amazing....
Killerblonde41 2 years ago
nice flow, I dig the layering ,bringing it to mush and starting again in a contrasting tone, the bubble ting was brilliant.props x4dr
christafarix4dr 3 years ago