New York, 1856

Whatever...

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human
Posts: 688
Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 7:53 pm

New York, 1856

Post by human »

This is an attempt at atmospheric day-for-night scenery

Image

The original was a woodcut almost certainly based upon a photograph.

I used several filters to remove the woodcut grooves and then darkened it and lowered the contrast.

I then painted gaslight into the windows and added streetlamps.

(Of course, it looks a lot better at full resolution.)

By the way, you're supposed to gather from this scene that the tallest skyscraper in Manhattan in 1856 was Trinity Cathedral!
human
Posts: 688
Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 7:53 pm

Post by human »

Whoohoo, my old forgotten friend Autodesk Animator to the rescue. It's likely the ideal codec for this animation.

Here are 30 frames at 1920x760, only 794Kb.

http://generalpicture.com/animation/tri ... screen.flc

Note that QuickTime can open this video.

Feedback welcome.
kevin
Posts: 22
Joined: Fri Mar 09, 2007 9:45 pm
Location: Seattle, WA

Post by kevin »

Beautiful. I viewed the clip with QuickTime and it is darker than the picture you posted so that the outline of the buildings isn't very distinct. I think you may want to lighten it a tad. A Ken Burns panning would look very cool with this.
human
Posts: 688
Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 7:53 pm

Post by human »

kevin wrote:Beautiful. I viewed the clip with QuickTime and it is darker than the picture you posted so that the outline of the buildings isn't very distinct. I think you may want to lighten it a tad. A Ken Burns panning would look very cool with this.
Aha, thanks for the feedback on picture quality. I will definitely look into this.

Re: panning. Even cooler than a kenburnsian pan would be one with parallax perspective, where I isolate three or four layers of the city and float them on different depth layers... but I haven't had the guts to commit myself to trying to achieve that...
human
Posts: 688
Joined: Tue Jan 02, 2007 7:53 pm

Post by human »

OK, now this represents a dream I've had for years... animating a Broadway omnibus.

I found it quite tricky to pull this off. (I'm sure you can imagine.)

Image

It's not quite done with it... still have to animate the horse leads and reins... not looking forward to it.

This will of course look better under forward motion and against a nocturnal urban background.

PS: You can expect the animation to run extremely ...s l o w l y... in your browser.
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