Animation Archive

Visual Puns Paper Animation

Starfish Animation Example

In Digital Video Arts, students will receive a visual pun and in a small group they will animate the concept using paper. Students create a storyboard first, then cut out backgrounds and characters. Then using a digital camera on a TRI-POD (this is very important) they take frame by frame images of their movie, moving the paper a little bit at a time. After the filming is done the pictures are uploaded into Windows Movie Maker. They MUST adjust the “options” to reduce the time that each picture shows before adding the pictures to the timeline. This is one of the most common errors, so remind them often!

This is my super quick example that I put together in about 5 minutes. But my students too several weeks to complete the project.

Rotoscoping!

Students (MS and HS) around the world collaborated to do this cool rotoscoping animation project… I keep trying to figure out how to add this assignment to my video class, but we barely get through the basics…


Rotoball 2009 from The Carrot Revolution on Vimeo.

Animated Introduction to Digital Video Arts

http://www.xtranormal.com/

Rotoball Project

Students from several countries crated rotoscoped animations.

Rotoball 2008 from The Carrot Revolution on Vimeo.

Pivot Animation

Use Pivot to create an animation (at least 1 minute long…or longer) Must have details AND a background. Save as a GIF. Upload to Windows Movie Maker and add music and credits.

Link to download at home http://www.snapfiles.com/get/stickfigure.html

Claymation 2006

For the Year 2005-2006 We received a grant from the Everett Education Foundation to support Claymation in my classes. I created “Sound Stages” with foam core. The students created backdrops and props. They also built their own clay characters using foil and cardboard for armatures. We used digital cameras on tripods to take still pictures and then edited them in Windows Movie Maker for the final productions.

For this grant the proposal was to have students adapt fairy tales into clay animation.  The students rewrote the story and created a story board, clay characters, props and backgrounds. The next step was to take pictures of slow movement in increments. The pictures were then scanned and formatted, and imported into MS Movie Maker. Students edited the images into a very fast slide show that imitates stop-motion animation. They added titles and credits and music and sounds. The grant covered the purchase of claymation How-to books for my classroom library, a camera, tripod, clay, foil and set building supplies like foam core. Supplies already on hand included fabric, paints, yarn and other background and prop building supplies.

Some resources I created/adapted: ~note March 2010~ I have lost the digital copies of these resources and need to recreate them. So for now they are not avilable. I will try to do this during spring break.~

  • Claymation Checklist  
  • Claymation Tutorial using windows movie maker
  • Claymation Rubric

 Other Claymation resources on the web:

Some You Tube Claymation examples that are age appropriate: (These are not by my students. I selected them because they are simple and within the skill set of my students… believe me you can get lost for hours looking at animation on You Tube…so beware!)

Teacher Tube (http://www.teachertube.com/) is a great alternative to You Tube to see and post student work. Here are some claymation by students posted by their teachers.