Clients From Hell is very funny in a dark comedy kind of way. You will laugh, but also be better prepared for the future! Enjoy.
-speaker
Clients From Hell is very funny in a dark comedy kind of way. You will laugh, but also be better prepared for the future! Enjoy.
-speaker
Jacked this from right….about…..here. It is written by
Frank Chimero. Frankie. Chimaira? FCP.R.E.M.I.X.. viafrank.
Faking It
“How do you get those uneven edges in your illustrations?”
“I draw them, unevenly.”
“What’s the best way to get this to look like it’s cut out of paper?”
“Cut it out of paper.”
“What typeface are you using? It looks so much like handwriting.”
“That’s my handwriting.”
These are all real questions I’ve been asked by folks. At lectures, in class, over email. It makes me feel like I’m in the business of serving up plain, glaring answers.
“Care to shed some enlightenment, Frank?”
“Hm, I don’t know. How about a big pile of obvious?”
Sorry folks, the most evident way of doing something is typically the way that I do it. No secret labs, no special tools, no computer gee-whizzery.
Disappointing, isn’t it? I’m not surprised that these people are asking these questions. I think everyone wants a peek into someone else’s process. What surprises me is that they infer there isn’t an easy, obvious answer to their questions. There’s a digital silver bullet somewhere, and damned if they aren’t going to find it. But still, surely people still know that handwriting something and scanning it in is an option, rather than using a typeface?
What’s interesting to me is that these questions are being raised because some peoples’ default states are to “fake it.” Maybe that’s a natural response to being constantly presented with things that are not real. Maybe it’s from working with tools whose reach is so wide, it’s sometimes difficult to grasp where their edges truly lie. The issue is that faking it is turning an awful lot of creative processes that have the potential to be deep oceans into shallow puddles. It’s weakening our physical connection to our work.
Our audiences have lower standards too. It’s unusual for them to be confronted with authenticity. When confronted with it, they’re startled. They don’t want to believe, and their first response is generally to scream “fake!” But, no green screen. No movie special effects. No camera tricks. Nothing that’s kind of like this other thing but isn’t quite it. It is what it is. And it really happened. I hadn’t fully realized it until recently, but authenticity is special now. Authenticity is special now.
“Wait, are you telling me they really released all of these bouncy balls down this big hill?” Yes I am. And if you have the choice, I think you should do it that way too.
oooooh mannnnn!!!

An absolutely spectacular commercial for the NY Times in Turkey. The song is perfect, animation exactly timed to the music, and every element of the design is carefully selected. I love how they used characters as people/ pedestrians. The whole thing is just brilliant!
Go here for more great work by imago, the designers responsible for this one.
Titles.
There’s no better intro to the art & history of title sequences than the beautiful Dr. Strangelove. This morning I got my Daily Heller with a bit about old movie title cards he found. While scanning through the source site, I was reminded of the extensive work and research that I did in this area this summer.
I think it’s a shame that these intro and closing pieces to movies are so often overlooked. It’s obvious that someone with a whole lot of talent put quite a bit of time and thought into them. Sometimes, like in the case of Catch Me if You Can, the whole movie is foreshadowed in the opening titles. Other times they are just clever or beautifully done. This and this are two sites I used a lot this summer are great places to find an excellent selection of title sequences. Sometimes when I need inspiration I just click through a few of these and my creative juices really get pumping.
Some of my personal favorites are: The Fall (incredible photography, handling of typography, incorporation of suspense and gestalt) , Catch Me if You Can, Stranger Than Fiction - which has an AWESOME Spoon song that gets stuck in my head each time I watch it, Brat Bratu (hand-done quality is extremely successful and well animated), Madagascar (cut/folded paper is so creative and well done, perfectly fits age bracket and is so excellently crafted), 3:19, Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events, and Mentiras Piadosas (absolutely gorgeous typography!)
What do you think, are credits overlooked? Which are your favorites?

-Mel