Poetry in motion Friday, 26 February 2010
Posted by Helen in News.Tags: animation, books, video
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The Carry a Poem reading campaign has been in full flow here in Edinburgh this month. Locals have had a chance to get hold of the free book, attend numerous adventurous events, see poems and poets on stage, on plants, on landmarks and even on sports shirts.
If you’re not in Edinburgh, or have missed the excitement, there’s still time to read the Carry a Poem book online (it’ll be available until the end of February) or take part by answering the question “how do you carry yours?“. Or, for BookCrossers, there’s a Carry a Poem bookring – sign up now.
Oh, and take a look at the animated trailer that Binary Fable produced for the campaign. If you’d like to know more about how it was made, I’ve been blogging about the production process.
Viral explosion Friday, 8 January 2010
Posted by Helen in News.Tags: animation, books, video
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A sneak preview of the Carry a Poem animation has exploded onto screens in Edinburgh and online. How do you carry yours? Visit www.carryapoem.com to tell your story and join the campaign.
Carry a Poem Wednesday, 9 December 2009
Posted by Helen in News.Tags: animation, books, story
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The Edinburgh UNESCO City of Literature Trust has announced its fourth annual reading campaign, for 2010.
It’ll be partnering with the Scottish Poetry Library to challenge the people of Edinburgh to Carry a Poem during the month of February. There will be the usual free books, activities, events, and even a new animation by Binary Fable (follow its production over at the Binary Fable blog).
The Carry a Poem campaign website has just been launched and needs your stories. Do you have a poem you carry with you? What does it mean to you? How do you carry it?
You don’t have to be in Edinburgh to take part. Simply get in touch with your answer to the question “How do you carry yours?” !
Artwork by Emily Isles – www.emilyisles.com
Books and animation Tuesday, 15 September 2009
Posted by Helen in News.Tags: animation, books
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All you aficionados of both books and animation – take a look at This Is Where We Live, a short animated film celebrating Fourth Estate’s 25th anniversary.
TIWWL was produced by Asylum Films and shows a city made out of books, through which little paper people go about their business. Speaking to Imagine Magazine, animation director Jordon Wood describes the challenges of character animation:
“Each character was animated traditionally on paper which gave us the fluid movement we wanted. To get the authentic paper texture and print, each frame was then transferred by hand onto book pages. These were then cut out so they could be positioned on set.
“I then had to come up with a way of standing a single piece of flat paper on its end. Creating paper tabs for feet was the obvious choice but they couldn’t support the weight and were visible which ruined the illusion of a seamless character walking off the pages. There were often up to 40 characters in a shot; one frame could take 8 minutes to set up so we couldn’t have characters blowing over. We needed a sturdy, invisible rig and the simplest solution turned out to be the most effective. The individual character frames were rigged with a spine (paper clip) which kept the character flat; glue discoloured the paper so we used white tac instead. We moulded a tiny white tac foot at the base of the spine which supported the weight, kept the character in position and left no residue on the set when replaced with the next frame.”
If you’ve got time, watch the timelapse videos showing the animation and set-building teams at work as well as the film – it’s a fascinating process.
Production still (The Museum Quarter) from This Is Where We Live at www.25thestate.com.
Disembodied Wednesday, 12 August 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, characters
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Did you wonder how we got this shot? With live-action, the actor would have had to be somewhat contorted to enable the camera to be positioned where her head should be.

It’s easier when your character is a computer model – you can simply cut off her hands!

Mwahahaha…
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Colours Wednesday, 29 July 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, characters, colour script, lighting, still frame
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Do you notice the colours when you’re watching a film?
You might not, but someone’s thought carefully about them. Not just the colour of costumes, props and sets, but the colour of the light and the overall colour balance of each shot.
Colours are used to give an atmosphere and to reflect mood. They can relate to characters. The overall colour will change throughout – there may be a colour arc that relates to the story arc or to a character’s arc. Pixar create “colour scripts” for each film – Lou Romano has posted a lot of his art for Up (warning, spoilers – be careful if you haven’t yet seen the film) including first pass colour scripts for Act I and a full colour script.
Now, in The Lost Book we had a different challenge. We didn’t know what the story would be, or who the characters would be, or what their stories would be. It meant we couldn’t plan colours or sketch a colour script. But, we still wanted to use colour as best we could.

In the first episode we set up some simple contrasts of colour and light. Dark colours and red were used when the book was stolen. Light colours, especially yellow, and bright light were used when Aileen was in a safe place. Tiny elements of purple/lilac were used to relate to the crime – the tag left on the lectern was purple and the bus set in the final shot, when Aileen discovers that all online copies of the book have also been stolen, features lilac as well as yellow.

We could build on this in episode 2. When Aileen’s talking to Kyle, she’s in a good place (yellows/light) but we’re not sure about Kyle (black). In the bookshop, someone bad has got at the books, so we’re using dark colours, reds and oranges.

By episode 3 we had a baddie – Otto Dafé. His name, with the reference to burning, fitted beautifully with the colour scheme we’d chosen for bad things, so we dressed him in black and made sure oranges and reds surrounded him. Even in episode 4, when he’s in the airport (a space we’ve made light and bright and full of greens – Kyle’s colour and another indication of a safe place) we darken the Otto shots by half-filling the screen with a black mobile phone, and adding orange/red tones in Otto’s books and in the seating in the background.


By episode 4 we also knew that Grazp Pharmaceuticals was responsible for the theft… so it turned out that their corporate colour was purple/lilac. This colour scheme segued into episode 5 where purples and blacks were used throughout – it wasn’t just the darkness that made this the darkest episode, everything about the tones used showed that the characters were in a tight spot.

But, we had a problem. Otto was no longer a bad guy, so his signature colours of red and orange couldn’t be used, and the link between him and those colours previously suddenly didn’t work so well. There wasn’t anything we could do about this, apart from reconceptualise orange/red as the colour range that meant books were in trouble.

The final episode showed a marked change in atmosphere. The scenes at the Sheep Heid Inn that frame the episode use bright light, yellows and greens. Both Aileen and Kyle are there, they’re safe and happy, no books are in danger. We used reds and purples in the early flashbacks, but gradually worked back through to yellows and greens as the mood lightened and the crime was solved.

Looking at all the stills, there’s quite a pleasing colour arc and the colours worked well to reflect the mood. But, Otto’s transition from baddie to goodie was very hard to handle!
(Oh, and on the subject of colours, this might amuse you as an insight into how obsessive we are about this sort of thing!)
The final installment Friday, 24 July 2009
Posted by The Lost Book in Story teamwork.Tags: animation, prize draw, story, video
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Hello and welcome to The Lost Book! (Welcome back to the regulars – we made it!) We’ve just launched the sixth and final episode – watch it now:
As you know, the story of The Lost Book was written entirely by you, the audience. Congratulations! You all deserve a round of applause. This was an amazing piece of teamwork – thanks, everyone, for taking part and working together.
I’m new – what’s this all about?! Thursday, 23 July 2009
Posted by The Lost Book in Story teamwork.Tags: animation, story, writing
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Welcome! We love newbies and hope you’ll feel at home soon. There’s lots to explore here and lots of ways to get involved. (more…)
Animation in Edinburgh Thursday, 23 July 2009
Posted by Helen in News.Tags: animation, interview
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Great piece by Laura Cummings in today’s Edinburgh Evening News about animation in the city: Getting animated over capital’s talent.
The reason for the interest in Edinburgh’s animation industry is a forthcoming screening of Ko Lik Films’ work at Filmhouse. The screening’s on Wednesday 29 July at 6pm and will feature some of the stop motion studio’s best work – including one of my personal favourites, Ujbaz Izbeneki Has Lost His Soul. There will be a Q&A afterwards with Ko Lik – if you’re in Edinburgh, why not go along?
Microstory: the end Monday, 20 July 2009
Posted by Helen in Microstory competition.Tags: animation, characters, story, writing
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Congratulations Peanut for writing the final installment of Sally Challenger’s journal. Peanut’s 100 words brings the expedition to an end, leaving the journal itself in safe (if bemused) hands.
Well done and thank you to everyone who has helped to write Sally Challenger’s journal:
Jasper Fforde, Matthias, Bookaddictus, Norvaljoe, Rocketboy (twice!), Mary, QueenofSheeba, Bananagirl, pondweed, Professor Moriaty, IndiaJones (twice!), curlyshirley, ScoutingForBoys, Martha K., Caroline (twice!), LuLu, Andrew J. Wilson, Dinobot, Wearealldoomed, Gondolagirl and Peanut.
Thanks also to everyone who submitted a story that wasn’t chosen – the competition was as fierce as an Abelisaurus! And, special thanks to guest writers Jasper Fforde and Andrew J. Wilson.
This experiment in collaborative writing has been brilliant. The stories are exciting – it’s amazing how much can be done with 100 words. We’ve also enjoyed how the gradual unveiling of events has fed into the animated story of The Lost Book (Sally Challenger’s journal was the “lost book” – the book stolen in the animation).
When we started we had no idea what secrets the journal might hold! It’s been fun to find out, and reveal a motive for its theft. We’ve also enjoyed the way a character from the journal, Professor Remi, has crossed over into the animation.
Read the full journal to find out all about Sally Challenger’s expedition.
“The most interesting collaborative book-writing experiment of the decade” – Jasper Fforde
Watson uncovers the evil plan Saturday, 18 July 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, rendering, still frame
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Thought you might like to see a (jaggy!) draft of Watson finding evidence of Grazp’s “project rejuvenation” – a rack of water-filled test-tubes with a note from the lab and the marketing department’s mock-up of a sales brochure.
The last tweaks to the animation, textures and lighting have been made and this shot is ready to be set off to render.
While the computers are working on the rendering, we’ll be going through to Glasgow tomorrow to record the voice track with Cora, Sean and Stephen. It’s all coming together nicely!
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First rendered frames Thursday, 16 July 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, rendering, still frame
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The render farm has finished our first shot – Aileen and Lyn in the dojo:

Hurrah!
The music recording session is tomorrow morning – various drafts have been coming through from Alexis all day. It’s all getting very exciting!
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Episode 6 – animation rough Wednesday, 15 July 2009
Posted by The Lost Book in Making of....Tags: animation, Music, soundtrack, video
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The animation rough for episode 6 is finished and handed over to sound designer Stephen and composer Alexis. Three cheers!
The rough still has our scratch track for the voices – we don’t record Cora and Sean until Sunday. The timings of all the action are finalised – although, we do still have quite a lot of finishing off to do: all the 2D graphics/animation (pub sign, newspapers/magazines, text message), the character movement in the Sheep Heid Inn and some of the smaller movements in the cleaning/dominoes shot and the Watson laser beams shot.
By the way, we’re using the Aileen character model for Aileen’s mum at the moment. The fully-rendered version will be an older version of Aileen, with grey hair and different clothes.
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Aileen learns kung fu Tuesday, 14 July 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, video
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I grabbed the “Aileen training to be in Invisible Inc.” shot, because I knew it would be entertaining to work on. I used the mostly-but-not-entirely spurious justification that I am Binary Fable’s martial arts expert.
(Judo classes. Aged five.)
Then I spent a lot of time on YouTube. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, YouTube is a brilliant source of reference video, particularly for anything that would be too exhausting to act out myself. Here are a few screen captures from the resulting routine:

(It was great fun to animate!)
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Library choice Tuesday, 14 July 2009
Posted by Helen in Story teamwork.Tags: animation, characters, Poll
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I’m in the middle of animating Otto’s library scene for episode 6. There have been two suggestions for which library he works in – Anna suggests the State Library of Victoria in Melbourne (aparently they have a great rare books collection and curator Des might give Otto a job), and ResQgeek suggests the Folger Shakespeare Library.
Which library do you prefer? Vote now in the sidebar poll to the right.
(Oh, and also in this scene we have incorporated Kiwi‘s punning suggestion of invisible ink, modified by Bibliomane‘s security ink idea, into the storyboards.)
If you’d like to make a story suggestion, Professor Catherine Remi needs a new challenge – she’ll feature on a magazine cover! Also, if you know the password from The Lost World you can help us with a book recommendation.
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Episode 6 – animatic Saturday, 11 July 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, composer, script, story, storyboard, video
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We’ve got a draft script, a set of storyboards, and an animatic so you can start to see how episode 6 will work.
First up, congratulations (and thanks!) to the people whose story ideas made it into the episode: Meg, for Kyle and Aileen’s date and for Aileen’s article; IndiaJones and Lulu for Watson’s evidence-gathering; Bookaddictus for Beryl’s arrest; Tom for Aileen joining Invisible Inc.; and Headlong for Aileen’s Mum getting released.
The animatic is very rough: storyboard sketches put together with a scratch track (a recording of the script as read by Adam and me). What it does for us is allows us to plan the timings of each sequence. This is a much slower episode than episode 5: although a lot of stories are included, they’re being recollected calmly. It takes the pace down from the frenetic activity of the rescue scene, so that we’re ready to leave the characters at the end.
We’re still discussing which library Otto is working in and what Professor Remi is doing (we snuck her story in on a magazine cover!) so there are some details that need to be finalised.
In the meantime, we’re working on the animation. We need to have all the animation finished by Wednesday morning so that we can hand a “rough” over to composer Alexis Bennett. It’s a pleasure to welcome Alexis back to the project – he wrote the music for episode 1 way back in January.
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What is Beryl’s evil plan? Friday, 19 June 2009
Posted by The Lost Book in Story teamwork.Tags: animation, story, video
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Hello and welcome to The Lost Book! (Or hello again if you’ve been here before – thanks for popping back!) We’ve just launched episode 5 – watch it now!
You can catch up with the story so far by watching all the episodes (it’ll take about seven minutes) or, for a quick catch-up, skim our introduction to the cast and story.

As you probably know, the story of The Lost Book is written entirely by you, the audience. There’s only one episode left so you need to decide how things end. First up, what’s our criminal’s motive? We know that:
• Beryl Potts hired book assassins K.B.E. to steal Sally Challenger’s expedition journal.
• The journal probably contains the secret of Professor Remi’s rejuvenation – and perhaps the location of the mysterious Ikhata.
But – why does Beryl Potts want the secret of eternal life? What’s her plan? Is it all about profit? (As Tom says, Grazp can charge higher prices if they have a monopoly.) Or, is Beryl ill and looking for a cure? (Anna’s suggestion.) Or, does she have some other goal?
We need you to tell us. Leave a comment now with your thoughts – what is Beryl’s eeeeevil plan?!
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Lighting in the dark Wednesday, 17 June 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, lighting, models
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We’ve talked before about how we light a scene – and make sure that there’s enough light on our characters. But, episode 5 is quite different. Everything apart from the first scene is set in the dark. So, how do we light that?!
Let’s break down the lighting used in the second scene, when Otto is hiding in the cupboard. There’s no window in the cupboard and the light isn’t on, so the only light is coming from the corridor via the glazed fanlight above the door, and sneaking through around the edges of the door. We need to be able to see what’s going on – but we also need to see that it’s dark.
First up, we put lights into the corridor (1). Then some smaller points of light around Otto (2). Finally, two lights deeper in the cupboard to create some highlights (3).

And, one finishing touch. Beryl Potts’s henchpeople are running past outside, so you’d expect the light at the edges of the door to be blocked as they pass. We added and animated blocks that are people-sized (if not entirely people shaped – they’re the strange pink things) so that the light round the door changes as the henchpeople run by.

Hey presto – you can see what’s going on in the dark! (Just.)
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Edinburgh film festival showreel Wednesday, 17 June 2009
Posted by Helen in News.Tags: animation, film festival, video
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The Scottish Animation Group is putting together a showreel of recent animation work to impress and astound delegates at the Edinburgh International Film Festival, which opens today.
Here’s the clip we’ve submitted showing all sorts of snippets from The Lost Book (in an entirely random order!). The sountrack we’ve used is the end credits music from episode 3, composed by Michael Ferguson and played by Jane Atkins, Su-a Lee and Alison Mitchell.
Many thanks to Iain Gardner and Once Were Farmers who volunteered to put together the showreel for the Scottish Animation Group. I’ll look forward to seeing everyone else’s clips during the festival.
Three cheers for YouTube Wednesday, 10 June 2009
Posted by Helen in Making of....Tags: animation, video
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Hooray for YouTube, source of reference video!
I’ve always been very dubious about leisure activities that can’t be done while eating cake. Reading, watching films, drinking coffee – yes. Abseiling – definitely no.
So, when it came to animating Lyn’s abseiling sequence, the traditional animator’s approach of studying “reference video” of myself performing the actions required didn’t appeal. At all.
Three cheers to all the people who selflessly risked their lives to abseil down things while being filmed by someone with a YouTube account – I’d never have been able to animate this shot without you!

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