Wednesday, May 2, 2012



For my final for Time Media I decided to do a rotoscope using Adobe Photoshop CS5.1. I took a video of my friend dancing and edited 9 seconds of it. I created a video layer and I used the paint brush and went frame by frame, first drawing her dress on every frame for 9 seconds at 29.97 frames per second. There is a total of 270 frames that I drew. Then I went through all of the frames and drew her arms, legs, and face. Then I went and drew her hair frame by frame. Her dress, body, and hair are each on different video layers in photoshop. Drawing each part frame by frame took a lot of time because I would have to draw and erase until I got each frame to look good to create the whole video which looks good and smooth. I decided to keep the background white because I thought that looked best. Then I decided to add a title to the beginning and credits to the end. For the title, I drew the blue background on a regular layer. On another layer I typed "Dance", then on a video layer I traced over the text with the paintbrush for two frames and then duplicated those two frames, alternating them so that the title is jumpy. Then I added my name on a regular layer. The title is 3 seconds. For the credits at the end, I reused the blue background and duplicated the "Dance" video layer. I typed "Created by Kate Sage" on a regular layer and then duplicated it and moved it to the right  every 3 frames so that when you play it it moves across the screen. I did the same for "Dance by Meghan Busch" and "With thanks to Professor Sanders". The whole video came out to be 17 seconds and I did the whole thing using Photoshop. When I was finished, I brought the video into final cut and added the music. The music I chose was "Matchmaker" from Killer Tracks.

Friday, March 23, 2012

midterm storyboard

Here is my storyboard for my midterm project. I planned to take a video of my friend dancing, then rotoscope the video. I wanted to make the background on solid color and create outlines on the dancer. That way the result would look like an outlined drawing dancing like a real person.

Monday, March 12, 2012

midterm rotoscope





Here are some screen shots of my midterm rotoscoping project. The first image is the actual video that I filmed and used for the project. The second image is the first frame in my After Effects project, the third image is the last frame in the project.

Also, here is a link to youtube of the video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpetyBhJ13A&feature=youtu.be


For my midterm for Time Media, I knew I wanted to use rotoscoping in some way. I was interested in the idea of using Adobe Photoshop to rotoscope a video. With that technique, the final video would be like a line drawing that did some kind of movement. My idea was that I would take a video of my friend dancing, edit it to a short clip, then bring it into Photoshop and draw each frame with the brush tool on a new layer. I would make the background one solid color, the girl would have a basic outline on her using different colors, and the outlined figure would dance around.
As I started working on this project, I decided to use After Effects instead of Photoshop. I found that I could get the same effect that I wanted just by using a different technique. In after effects, I edited my video down to 7 seconds and used the rotoscope brush to rotoscope the girl. I went frame by frame editing the rotoscope so that her silhouette was perfect. When I was finished with that, I made the background black and the girl white, like a mask. I put layer styles on her to make a black stroke around her. Then I put the cartoon effect on her, in black and white, and on her edges, editing the radius and thresholds, leaving a little bit of detail showing on her. After that, I wrote her name and put a stroke and a drop shadow on it. Then I positioned the name where I wanted it in relation to the girl and parented the video to the text. Then I keyframed the text and made it zoom out so that you could read the whole thing. Lastly, I made a still image of the last frame and held it there for about 2 seconds at the end of the video. At the end, my video came out to be 9 seconds long.
I'm happy with the way my project turned out, I was able to get the exact effect that I wanted. This is something that could be used in the future for another project or to lead in to something else. The difficulty I had was the amount of time it actually took to go through all of the frames frame by frame to edit them all. Also, It took me a little bit of time to figure out how to get a still image of the last frame so that it would hold there for a couple of seconds.

For my final project, I'm planning on using the same video that I took and used for my midterm. I'm going to rotoscope it again but i'm going to be redoing the rotoscope. I really like the look of the rotoscope in Photoshop using the paint brush and painting over the video frame by frame. I'm going to edit another section from the video and bring it into Photoshop and do the rotoscoping. I'm going to make the background and everything besides the drawing transparent. Then I am going to make a background of a stage. I'll take a picture of a real stage and put it behind the drawing. The end product will look like a line drawing dancing on a real stage.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

3D composite

For my 3D composite, I used the same image that I made for the 2D composite. I repositioned the images, then I animated the butterflies to fly around. I also made the camera zoom in and pan left.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

2D composite

Here is my first assignment, my 2D composite. I added the two butterflies and the caterpillar to the image of the tree branch. I used blend and comps and 2d transform tools to size, position, and rotate the images.