03 6 / 2011

Virutal spray paint - Graffiti on screen

“It is inspired by the techniques of drawing, painting, printing, graffiti, … and is built upon a digital process that enables an infinity of features and extensions. The cloth painting is the screen, the brush is a specific can. Sometimes mouse, other times brush, the specific can allows the user to paint or to change or select a parameter of the brush, his size or color. Everything is done on the screen.”

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13 1 / 2011

A little bit on hand drawn videos

Hand drawn videos have been very very popular in the last year, mostly due to the RSA Animate output that introduced this style to a wider audience (“The surprising thruth about what motives us” is now at over four million views). 

  Most people I have talked to watched the RSA videos from beginning to end. That is a whole 10 minutes, almost unimagineable in times where our attention span usually doesn’t exceed 30 seconds. I think a large part of what fascinates people about it is to see something in the making, being able watch it being created. It let’s you step right into the process of how something is made- it’s not only entertaining, but almost educational. And you want to finish it, see where it goes, how it ends. There is a creative tension in hand drawn stuff that is usually only achieved by good storytelling or suspense. And all it takes is a piece of paper and a pen (okay, and some skills).   Of course the genre of hand drawn videos is much bigger that just the “RSA Animate style”. When I met up with a client the other day to talk about what other techniques and examples are out there I promised to send him a list. Since there’s absolutely no reason not to share this with everyone else, you now get to read that list, too. I tried to come up with a couple of categories to summarize style or technique. I’m not a pro on video production terms, so bear with me if I got something wrong there :)  And if you have any other videos or techniques in mind that I should add definitely let me know, I’d really appreciate it.     WHITEBOARD DRAWINGS (analogue, mostly using stop motion)

PAPER DRAWINGS (analogue, using stop motion)

PAPER CUT OUT (analogue, recorded, stop motion)

SKETCH BOOK / FLIP BOOK

DIGITAL HAND DRAWN

Here’s also a youtube playlist I created. If you feel like wanting to get into the hand drawn flow, watch them all :)  

09 2 / 2010

First time trying digital notetaking with Scribbles - Open Design meeting @atebits

Today we had a meeting about open design at Betahaus. I usually draw with pens and paper, but wanted to try going digital for quite a while. I just hadn’t found a tool that suited my purposes. Thanks to Arne I discovered Scribbles.
Scribbles works really well for, well, scribbling and quick notetaking. It’s easy to switch between brushed and colours (Photoshop is painful when it comes to that). High resolution, saving to all kinds of formats and the “infinite canvas” which allows you to draw in all directions spontaneously (which is quite important when you do graphic recording) makes it a tool I’ll definitely spend 20$ for. 

There’s also a free version, if you wanna give it a try. The full version has of course a couple of more features.
And if you’re in Berlin and interested in Open Design you’re more than welcome to join us next week Tuesday (17th) at 19.30 at Studio 70 on Kottbusser Damm 70.

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11 11 / 2009

Trillions: The future of our information ecology

A video that illustrates the hugeness of our digital future: trillions of networked computers representing all scales of information and objects will make up the edgeless ecology of information that we’ll be floating in.

Posted via web from Fräulein Schiller | Comment »