tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5930252795026175746.post5453409139162947244..comments2023-05-09T11:39:28.773+01:00Comments on Josh Audsley-Smith: New Malaria pre-vizAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10227767585829808966noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5930252795026175746.post-25317905126255791132015-04-26T00:48:02.995+01:002015-04-26T00:48:02.995+01:00Hi Josh,
Okay - a couple of observations/suggesti...Hi Josh,<br /><br />Okay - a couple of observations/suggestions:<br /><br />Not sure about the camera being so 'welded' to the top of the blood cell in the opening sequence; it feels a bit mechanical in a way that just a free camera might not do - especially as you don't continue with this locked-to-an-object camera for the rest of the animation.<br /><br />I think 'Now in the liver' could just read 'In the liver' instead.<br /><br />@49 secs / this sequence seems too hurried - as the meriozoites leave the liver - it's hard to follow the action as it is right now; bit too small/bit too quick?<br /><br />@56 secs - when the blood cell stops to show us what's happening inside, I think it's distracting to have the other elements continuing around it, as they draw our eye away from the staging of this information; I'd consider freezing all the action while you complete these sequences.<br /><br />@1.22 secs - you've got a quick fade to black and then you resume the same action - is there a purpose to this fade, or is it a glitch?<br /><br />@1.33 - see previous suggestion re. freezing all other elements as you focus on changes within the blood cell: I think the staging of this 'two blood cell' sequence needs to be reconsidered, as the framing is a bit ugly, as right now your cropping the edges of the blood cells etc. and the staging looks a bit squashed on screen.<br /><br />In terms of your text elements, I'd a) explore a few more typefaces; it needs to be easy to read, but there's something a little old-fashioned-looking about your current choice, and b) I'd consider using one colour only for all the labels; perhaps you're colour coding for a purpose, but as the labels very clearly relate to the components on screen, the different colours don't seem necessary.<br /><br />Hope all is going well :)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />tutorphilhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11842833126210822641noreply@blogger.com