Posts tagged with ‘animation

Slavery Footprint is a vivid demonstration of how to use the principles of design and the latest animation and jquery tools to tell a compelling story about the continued existence of slavery and how slaves are involved in producing the stuff we use every day.

Slavery Footprint is a vivid demonstration of how to use the principles of design and the latest animation and jquery tools to tell a compelling story about the continued existence of slavery and how slaves are involved in producing the stuff we use every day.

Animators Sebas and Clim made Tiny Story, an animated film that plays like an Elements of Style for narrative design. Story about the film from Co.Design.

A section of a single-page website full of animations and fun illustrations. 

A section of a single-page website full of animations and fun illustrations. 

Bite-size romantic tales animated by Poke London. This just goes to show what you can do with the simplest of tools, creative freedom, and big ideas. 

Discovered at animade.tv

Reblogged from places too numerous to mention, these animated book covers inspired by Pottermore are the work of Maja, a 19-year-old Swedish woman who is both a Harry Potter fan and clearly very talented. (Confession: Until today, I had never heard of Pottermore, a series of e-books revolving around, d’oh, the Harry Potter books, and greeted by some as “Potterbore.”)

(Source: whataboutneville)

Respublica Bookstore Poster Animations

These animated gifs are a work of art. They are part of a package of work done for Respublica Bookstore by Pavel Paratov (animation), Stas Leontev (design), and Vasiliy Filatov (audio). The work appears on Behance, but without any additional information, alas.

 

Via albertonomo, from illustrativo.

This logo was animated using the html5 canvas element, and jasvascript, and responds to user input.
As the creator, Hakim El Hattab, explains: “The animation consists of a 		few core properties of the logo, such as shape and color, changing slowly using a fine  		combination of randomness and control.”
The animation is quite lovely. You can see it at the site Meru Media.

This logo was animated using the html5 canvas element, and jasvascript, and responds to user input.

As the creator, Hakim El Hattab, explains: “The animation consists of a few core properties of the logo, such as shape and color, changing slowly using a fine combination of randomness and control.”

The animation is quite lovely. You can see it at the site Meru Media.

Fascinating project by onformative: animations of faces into rgb fragments, changing with the viewer’s perspective.