The Noun Project Credits:
Football designed by Saman Bemel-Benrud
Rocket designed by John O’Shea
Tree designed by Saman Bemel-Benrud
Palace designed by Okan Benn
Archive for the ‘openonline’ Category
Name that 80s movie #5
Thursday, July 12th, 2012Name that 80s movie #4
Thursday, July 12th, 2012Experimenting a bit with The Noun Project and Illustrator before today’s Breakfast Club edition of ds106, and figured I would throw out another 80s movie 4 icon challenge because I can!
The Noun Project Credits:
Television by The Noun Project
VHS Tape by Ted Mitchner
Lips by Davide Eucalipto
Gun by Simon Child
Twin Peaks – fanedit
Thursday, July 12th, 2012Watching the four plus hour Northwest Passage fanedit of Twin Peaks brought back a bunch of memories. The video claims to be distillation of the mystery surrounding Laura Palmer’s murder. I suppose it works on that level but frankly, I was never much interested in the plot line of David Lynch’s television masterpiece.
I watched it week after week for two years because it was the weirdest and most beautiful thing I’d ever seen on the tube.
I suppose the Northwest Passage fanedit provides a convenient way to either dive-in to or brush up on Twin Peaks. And it also contains several moments that can be turned into animated GIFs for those of us still trying to hone the skills.
TDC: Cheating tornado
Thursday, July 12th, 2012Turned out I did yesterday’s Daily Create. Bother. I cheated with Dorothy’s house, and drew the tornado. (I cannot draw. That is why I do mashups in the first place!)
The Daily Create 185 – Draw a Tornado
Thursday, July 12th, 2012First off… one week of TDC’s, challenge accepted CogDog.
Got a little carried away with my tornado drawing. Started by wanting to add a real background, which I took with my iPad out the window of the car dealership waiting room I was in at the time. Then I decided to add some objects… cars made sense, then a bus. Elephant? Might as well add slide guy.
Then I figured I might as well make them all move. So I threw everything in scratch as separate sprites, gave them glide paths, rotations and zooms. Its a bit sloppy at the beginning and end because I planned on recording it and transferring it to an animated gif. Recorded it with Quicktime screen capture, loaded the .mov into imageJ (yes, old school…) and converted to animated gif.
Problems: loaded into flickr, which apparently doesn’t display animated gifs. So the gif and scratch files are embedded below.
Scratch:
Animated gif:
Re-interpreting the Daily Create
Thursday, July 12th, 2012I totally got schooled today. Totes. Schooled.
I certainly can’t have that, so I got to thinking about yesterday’s Daily Create, which was “Take a picture of a cloud and tell us what it looks like to you.”
I checked the Daily Create yesterday and then looked at the sky. It looked something like this for most of the day:
After a week of 100+ degree days and no rain for forever, yesterday’s showers were a welcome sight. I promptly forgot about TDC #184 and went about my day.
I forgot about it, that is, until I was reading my son stories before bed time. One of last night’s stories was A Fly Went By by Mike McClintock. Kids’ books are weird, and this one is no exception. There’s a lot of talk about guns and animals killing each other. But look what’s on the last page:
CLOUDS!
I was going to snap a picture of this page last night and upload it to Flickr (the cloud in the top left corner reminds me of a shark), but I (a) forgot (b) was lazy (c) was forgetful (d) all of the above.
So let’s talk about re-interpreting.
Shortly after I read that I had invented the lamest excuse ever (truth), my son pulled a bag of poly-fil (the filling for stuffed animals, quilts, and whatnot) off the shelf.
He takes this stuff out of the bag, puts it on his head and my head, and calls it “bubbles” since it looks like bubbles in the bathtub. Do you know what else it looks like?
CLOUDS!
“Here’s your re-interpretation,” I thought as I taped the poly-fill to one of the windows. I had a vision that this taped-up poly-fil would look like clouds in the sky. Do you know what poly-fil looks like taped to a window? Santa Claus’s pubes.
I was close to just snapping the picture and being done with it, but I wanted to make it work. I wanted something that would kind-of-sort-of match up to the image I had in my head.
Maybe taping the poly-fil to blue construction paper with a yellow sun would make things look less pube-ish.
Less obscene, yes. But still lame.
I give up. Jobot and I play with his cars. Jobot drives his cars into the bubbles/clouds/fog.
YES, JOBOT! That’s it! Hand me those planes!
And here’s what we do:
That was fun.
So I got that TDC #184 (even if it was a day late), but do you know what I loved most about the whole thing? The fact that my kid was involved and the process of failing, failing, failing, and then finally getting it. True, these were small fails on what some would consider an insignificant task, but it felt good nonetheless.
So there. #4life. I win. Maybe… there’s still that seven day Daily Create challenge.
First Time Teaching Animated GIFs
Thursday, July 12th, 2012I just blogged about the animated GIF I made while showing the Breakfast Club edition of ds106 how to make animated GIFs. What struck me after writing that post was that it’s the first since teaching this class that I actually taught any group of people how to make an animated GIF. There are a few reasons for that: 1) we have a few tutorials for this kind of thing, 2) I’ve never before taught ds106 in a classroom full of computers with Photoshop, and 3) I’m usually much lazier.
All that said, I had my chance today and I didn’t want to squander it. So I spent some time this morning consulting video guru Andy Rush so I could be sure I had a workflow that would make creating animated GIFs seamless even on lab computers that can be locked down and hostile to new programs. I think we came up with a pretty good formula, and I’ll sketch that out below for good measure.
We didn’t want the overhead of DVD ripping or any of that, so we decided to make them get the clips they want to work on from YouTube using pwnyoutube.com, in particular the File2HD option, and be sure to select the mp4 version of the YouTube clip (click the get files button, the big, honking Download buttons above and below are bad ads).
Once they had the clips with the scene they want to use I had them open MPEG Streamclip (which I installed on the lab computers beforehand, and it didn’t seem to need any special admin permissions in this lab). MPEG Streamclip allows them to select the precise in and out points of the short scene they want to animate and trim away the rest. Once they have done this they need to export it as an mp4 file (this is where these directions for PhotoShop diverge for GIMP which would require them to export the video as individual image files).
Finally, they import the video to Photoshop (we are using CS 5.5 on the PC) and it is Import–>Video to layers. After that they simply go to Window–>Animation and animate the GIF and save for the web.
It was amazing, I showed them how to do this process in about 15 minutes, and they spent the next hour and 15 minutes making GIFs, and I have to say I was very impressed. Their files were a bit bloated, and we talked about that, but over all there work so far has been amazing. I am blown away. Here are a few samples!
I love that this student figured out adding text to animated GIFs. #4life!
This one is a bit long and bloated for its own good, but I love it.
Game on college students, you need to bring your A-game to catch up with these Breakfast Club all-star ds106ers who are 4life in only 2 weeks!
400 Blows
Thursday, July 12th, 2012I did the above GIF on the fly while showing the Breakfast Club edition of ds106 how to make animated GIFs using MPEG Streamclip and Photoshop. Today was a thoroughly enjoyable class—and the students seemed to have a blast and did some fun stuff themselves. Many of them are already done with there 10 visual stars, a couple did closer to 20! What’s more, we are on our way to the design assignments, and after spending the last hour of today’s class talking about the design assignments, I know it’s gonna be a ball. I love ds106 design!
TDC: can’t build a castle on this one
Wednesday, July 11th, 2012I never chose Dare in Truth or Dare, so I can’t promise I’m rising to Alan Levine’s dare, but here’s a cloud. Literalism doesn’t suit me today, so instead I present my cloud as an image of the ephemeral. It has no real solidity (I even had to mess with contrast and sharpness for it to show well on screen). You cannot build your castles or dreams upon it, and soon it won’t exist at all. All things pass away. A philosophical cloud, it is unreliable and defiantly transient.
Explore your Inner Creativity: The Daily Create
Wednesday, July 11th, 2012Towards the end of 2009, a number of friends on Twitter proclaimed their intent to participate in a project 365 photography adventure, and I decided to rekindle my interest in photography by playing along. Supported in part by @duncan‘s TheDailyShoot, I managed to get into the daily habit of making time for photography, and sharing a photo a day to my account on Flickr. By the end of 2010, I was pleased, not only with the collection of photographs I had accumulated, but with a number of other incidental results:
My enjoyment of the 2010/365 project led me to continue on into 2011/365. Armed now with a self-bestowed boxing-day present, a Sony NEX-5 DSLR (actually, an EVIL or MILC camera, the choice after conversations with @digitalnative and several months investigation), I continued taking photographs, using the new Sony, the older Canon, and the ever-present iPhone to capture daily events and thedailyshoot photo challenges.
However, In August 2011, things got particularly busy (numerous trips, photo outings, and other things), my laptop hard drive became filled to capacity (Aperture and even the OS ground to a slow crawl as space for page swaps became virtually(pun) non-existent), and my habit faltered. September brought the return to school (numerous variables there) and October saw the end of thedailyshoot (after 690 prompts, it folded on October 6th, 2011), and by that time, the habit was upset. Despite a couple of attempted jump-starts (drives to visit the Muse Tree, for example, and the arrival of a new 2012/366 self-challenge), the daily practice of shooting and posting a photo to flickr had been disrupted.
(Perhaps, I should also acknowledge to myself, in hindsight, that I had become engaged in the fall of 2011 with a new regular (though not daily) practice of broadcasting on #ds106radio …)
At any rate, very shortly after January 1st, 2012, @timmmmyboy tweeted out a few test posts related to something new, TheDailyCreate, which would provide a daily prompt, not always for photography, but also for audio, video, and other sorts of creative inspirations. After providing a few test posts, I saw the value in this new prompt source, and decided to try it out.
Skipping forward over February – June, we arrive at July 11th, and what do I see but a challenge from the @cogdog , somewhat uninspired by the recent summer engagement in TheDailyCreate (yes, folks are on summer holidays, relaxing, BUT you still need to nurture that daily creative habit, folks — and to that I can attest!), and so he presents a seven-day challenge. Do the daily create for the next seven days. Starting today. Starting NOW.
CogDog’s Charles Atlas remix “Seven-Day-Challenge”
Now, a couple years back, I employed a “follow 30 people for 30 days” mantra when introducing new folks to Twitter, as a way of helping folks “see, over time” how the social media service could be supportive of their work as educators. And if I recall correctly, research somewhere has indicated a “23-day” adoption period during which a daily application of a routine will result in the forming of a new habit.
So I’m going to prematurely suggest that once you meet Alan’s seven day challenge, you repeat it, twice more. I figure 21 days ought to be close enough to 23 days for you to get the gist. And at that point, why stop?
One caveat. You may find yourself pushed to complete some of TheDailyCreate challenges. I would suggest that if you struggle with one of them, go back in the Archives and complete another one from that same category and post it, with its respective tag, instead. While I’ve not employed that strategy yet, I’m going to deploy it starting today.
In response to Alan’s visual seven day challenge, I reply:
“Twenty-One Days to a Creative Habit” by aforgrave, on Flickr
Get your create on! Get it on on a daily basis. The Daily Create can get you started.
BTW, two days ago, I replaced the hard drive again in my laptop. I’m currently starting out the summer with a glorious 620 GB of free space on my drive. Yesterday, I managed 200 photos on my Sony, and when the battery ran out, I took another 108 on my iPhone. Both batteries are now recharged. And I just “created” that cartoon. Time to draw a Tornado. (There are currently seven posted. Will you ad yours today? Now?)
Posted in @digitalnative, @duncan, alan levine, bunk1, Camp Magic MacGuffin, CampMagicMacGuffin, cogdog, Colin Harris, commentary, creativity, dailyshoot, ds106, duncan davidson, flickr, imaginages, Learning, magicmacguffin, mixed-up media, openonline, Project 365, Seven-Day-Challenge, something made, The Daily Create, TheDailyCreate, thoughts, Twenty-One-Day-Challenge, twitter | Comments Off on Explore your Inner Creativity: The Daily Create