Sunday, September 12, 2021

Story Artist Notes

  When it comes to finding employment as a storyboard artist:

the portfolio and the work is the most important thing.


  • Get your work out there!
  • Search for people that can teach the things that you want to learn.
  • Look at the people in the story dept. on IMDB and find them on social media, connect, follow, and reach out.
  • Draw every day, every waking moment available and improve your eye-hand coordination.
  • Dedicate yourself!
  • but also pace yourself and don't become complacent

Portfolio Advice

  • A professional presence is important. Your work should be clean and easy to read.
  • Have a portfolio, resume, and a cover letter tailored to the studio that you are applying to.
  • The resume should indicate:
    1. Where you came from...
    2. Position objective: Ex-"I am seeking a position as a storyboard artist on a T.V production."
    3. Training
    4. Software related to the task

Story Exercises

  1. Create a list of the types of shots you would like to practice; such as comedy, action, suspense, drama, etc.
  2. Grab a script of a show you have never seen before
  3. Work to meet your practice goals
  4. Try telling a story in a single panel...it can be quite a challenge!

Books and Resources

  • "How to Draw" by Scott Peterson. Teaches perspective drawing and the theory of perspective.
  • Andrew Loomis art books
  • Robert Valley
  • Scorcese films for reference
  • Marshall Vandruff
  • Dean Cornwell
  • JC Leyendecker
  • Norman Rockwell
  • Draw from Disney films: Expressions, poses, hand shapes.

It is possible to be a working artist!


Cal
"I see the recurring question of how clean the thumbnail should be.
Don't be fooled by the art of books. Although we occasionally have to make our boards pretty for an executive presentation or test screening, I must emphasize
storyboards are meant to be a blueprint for the production.

It's about the information, not pretty drawings.

Rendering won't solve a staging problem and coloring definitely won't make a generic camera angle goes away.
 

Focus your drawing on accurate proportion, dynamic pose and appealing shape.
Take a look at this panel by Glen Keane. Everything you need to know is there! He didn't even need to draw the grid and you know what shot and how high the eye level is. Most importantly, you know what are they feeling.

Less is more....always."

Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Animated Obstacles

Obstacles in getting an animated project made:

  • Funding - Finding sources of finance
  • Finding the talent to create the project
  • Legal documentation clarity
  • Distribution strategy

I had the opportunity to speak to an animation producer from Netflix, and he told me that in order to get your ideas in front of a development executive, you will need a lawyer to represent you and/ or an agent. The reason for this is because the studios do not want unsolicited ideas to prevent lawsuits that claim a story or idea was stolen.

Regarding the other bullet points, I will have to do some research to try and alleviate those pain points.

The Not - So - Starving Artist Calculator

The Not-So-Starving Artist

A Simple Calculator to Price Your Work

SALARY


Enter your desired annual salary.


EXPENSES (Yearly)


Ex: software licenses, overhead costs, and materials.

DAY RATE

$
$

PROJECT TIMELINE


How many days will the project take to complete?

TIME BUFFER


Projects often take longer than expected to finish. Add a buffer of extra time (usually 25%).

PROJECT COST

%





Thursday, September 24, 2020

Daily and Weekly Stock Charts - WMT, ZTS, AMZN, PG

Note: the *WEEKLY page will load blank.  

To fix: click in the address bar and hit "Enter" on the keyboard to load the page correctly.

Weird Chart I Found

Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Stocks I'm Looking At

I used widgets from https://www.tradingview.com/widget/advanced-chart/

Tuesday, May 21, 2019







Testing image placement

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Mickey Mouse Works - TV Series -1999

I remember being excited to finally have some new Mickey content featuring the voice of the late Wayne Allwine as Mickey. The show was "Mickey Mouse Works" and featured a quaint CGI factory introduction showcasing the "animation process" from drawings to ink and paint.

Unfortunately the show aired on Saturday mornings at a very unreasonable hour. It's like they didn't want anyone to watch it!

Setting up a VHS player to record episodes onto blank tapes bought from the dollar store was the solution. I still have some of those tapes! I don't remember much advertising and recently had a hard time finding any promotional material or quality images.