The logo animation will play as soon as the user enters the site. It will be VERY short and there will be sound underneath with randomm talking. I will collect these and add them over time. It would also serve as a loading movie for the video.
Wow! I really like it. It is easy to understand how it moves.
I like the roughness of the text. Can it be even rougher? Maybe each letter is slightly tilted? I would like to see more hand-rendering characteristics :)
The colour of the stripes looks nice too, but in my opinion, if the stripes have the same roughness as the text (as if they are painted), it will be even better!
However, the very rough small text is too rough to be legible. Maybe less rough?
I know this is a draft. What I said above is just some suggestions.
(Sometimes I think, believing in yourself is a way better than listening to someone's advice.)
The objective is to create short documentaries about quirky places to travel.
Telling stories online is exciting and challenging because of all the tools at our disposal. Documentarians must think on multiple levels at once: words, ideas, story structure, design, interactives, audio, video, photos, judgment.
TV is about showing the news. Print is more about telling and explaining. Online is about showing, telling, demonstrating and interacting.
Rather than creating one 40 minute show I am splitting the segments up so that the content is richer than a typical travel show. It is a cross between documentary and travelogue focusing on peoples "stories".
The content would be online with the idea that when there are enough stories a broadcast version could be made.
Anderson, Chris. “Free! Why $0.00 Is the Future of Business.” Wired Magazine. February 25, 2008 Beem, Edgar. "The State of the Art Report: Photojournalism Survival." PDN - The Photojournalism Market: A Survival Guide August 2008: 34-42
Coupland, Douglas. "City of Glass." Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre, 2000
Harmon, Katherine. "You Are Here." New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2004
Hayes, Derek. "Historical Atlas of Vancouver & the Lower Fraser Valley." Vancouver/Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre, 2000
Walker, David. "Different Medium Same Stagnant Rates." PDN: The Photojournalism and Editorial Issue August 2007: 46-50
Yates, Dwight. Personal Interview. 18 September 2008.
2 comments:
Wow! I really like it. It is easy to understand how it moves.
I like the roughness of the text. Can it be even rougher? Maybe each letter is slightly tilted? I would like to see more hand-rendering characteristics :)
The colour of the stripes looks nice too, but in my opinion, if the stripes have the same roughness as the text (as if they are painted), it will be even better!
However, the very rough small text is too rough to be legible. Maybe less rough?
I know this is a draft. What I said above is just some suggestions.
(Sometimes I think, believing in yourself is a way better than listening to someone's advice.)
Looks great! Although, I think it is "journeys" and not "journies."
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