Category Archives: Cartoons

Holiday Cartoons

Design fun with a different medium

What’s a .gif?

“.gif” stands for Graphic Interchange Format. They are those annoying little animated images on web pages that repeat endlessly. They are basically short, simple animations.

I am fascinated by animation. The way still images turn into motion is still magic to me. Years ago I went through a phase of making flip books. They were pads of paper with drawings on the bottom, a slightly different one on each page. When you flipped the pages with your thumb, you got a moving image.

After much research, I discovered that I could create .gif’s and put them on my website. My website, however, will only show very small .gif’s. That limits the number of frames and the number of pixels in each frame. I can make very short cartoons, about 12 frames maximum. These .gif’s are like short flip books.

The images are limited to 200 x200 pixels maximum. Due to this low image resolution, I draw directly on the computer, using the mouse as a pen. Its really different, and difficult, to draw with a mouse. But the digital drawings are easy to erase, so I just keep trying until I get it right.

Intrigued with the idea of making my own cartoons, and challenged by the limits, I set to it. After many experiments, I started to get some successes. Here are some of my first .gif’s, greetings for the holiday

Sketchy Bunny: This is the first cartoon .gif I got to work. It looks like a first attempt, but has a certain awkward charm. I drew the lines using the mouse and then paint bucketed the color.

Wonderful Easter: I used the computer to draw this rabbit, creating painted ellipses and circles. The resulting smooth drawing has a completely different feel, and the hopping motion is a little better.

Happy Bunny: I used the same drawing and focused on the motion. I like the jumping feeling, and the cartoony way the body jumps higher than the legs.

Elijah’s Cup: After the leaping rabbits, I wanted to create a subtle cartoon with very little motion. This .gif is based on a part of the Passover sedar (dinner). A glass of wine is set out for Elijah. The youngest child opens the door to let in Elijah’s spirit, who is said to sip from the glass. We would watch the glass for the slight motion that showed Elijah had visited. He came every year, perhaps helped a little by my father’s knee against the table leg. In this cartoon, if you look closely the wine in the glass moves a little. Not directly related to Elijah’s cup, matzo ( a plain flat cracker bread) is eaten at the sedar. A piece of the matzo also disappears in the animation.

Happy and wonderful spring, and good holidays to you…

Happy Valentine’s Day

My take on the traditional Valentine’s Day card

 Ah Valentine’s day, when a young man’s fancy turns to – digital modeling. After the intense digital 3D modeling involved in the Affordable Housing Prototype (see previous postings), I turned to it again to make this year’s Valentine’s Day cards. Here are 3 videos and 2 still lifes.

I have included all of the videos I made this year. “(lmr val 2010 1.avi to 4.avi)” I think the last is my favorite. I get different ideas when trying to design something. I can never predict how an idea will take shape (one thing that makes it so fun), and I never know which idea will give the best results.

Top: This is an image I made for my sisters. I started thinking about doing something with “Sis”. I realized that Sis is symmetrical, if you mirror the last “s”. Yes, that’s how my mind works. I then started thinking about mirrors, and symmetrical letters, words and objects. I took half letters/words for my symmetrical message “wow sis! val day!”. I added Valentine’s Day objects and the requisite architect’s pencil. I set them all up on the table, in front of a mirror. Then our ever curious cat came by to see what I was doing.

Second from Top (video with cats): A video assembled from a very quick model. My animation software allows you to move around the model, but you can’t change the model. You can, however, hide parts of the model. This video reveals step-by-step a chorus of cats singing a Valentine’s greeting (“Happy Valentine’s Day, Bubbah!”) to Lisa, standing on a heart shaped stage.

Third from Top (Video with red cylinder): The idea was to start with a set of unrelated objects that would merge at the end into a heart. As with many computer projects, it took longer than I expected. Somehow the end result isn’t quite as interesting as the idea.

 Fourth from the Top (video inside building): I started with a traditional Valentine’s object, Sweetheart candies made by NECCO**. The idea here was to start with a familiar object, viewed at an unfamiliar scale. You don’t recognize it at the start, but get a pleasant surprise of recognition about half-way through.

Bottom: A Valentine’s image that celebrates my dad. I wrote down some of the qualities that make him a great dad, typed them together to form a pattern and applied it to the word “Dad”. I stood “Dad” in front of a photo of my dad. Everything is large scaled and zooming in forced perspective.

A wonderful Valentine’s day full of love, romance and chocolate to my readers.

**Interesting (to me anyway) Factoid: NECCO is also the manufacturer of NECCO wafers, the pastel colored candy disks. Did you know that NECCO stands for New England Confectionary COmpany? (NECCO and Sweethearts are copyrighted by NECCO)

Happy Birthday Lisa

A birthday card

You have to feel a little sorry for people with birthdays around Christmas. Their birthdays are often forgotten, and when remembered they are told their one Christmas gift is for their birthday too.

Lisa is one such person. I thought I would use this constant annoyance as the start of her birthday card.

Since this all revolves around dates, it seemed reasonable to start with a calendar. A mock-serious scroll at the start of the month asks for our understanding. A giant Christmas tree literally and figuratively casts its shadow over the month. Lisa, in mock-super hero fashion (“The Lavender Crusader”?), pushes a branch out of the way of “her day” and strides out of the frame, aggressively reminding us not to forget her birthday.