Snow white and technology


1. Rotoscoping - using video as inspiration for movement in animation. Its been used in films like superman to create scenes with lois. They could film the main character moving whilst also moving the background. 

2. Cels - Short for celluloid, traditional 2D animation technique when individual drawings are placed on a translucent sheet, which are then photographed in sequence over a painted background to create the illusion of motion. 24 cells per one second of film, 200,000 individual cells used for Snow White. 

3. Technicolor - cameras were bulky and used prisms to allow light to split into red green and blue, the dye transfer process was when cyan, magenta, yellow were pressed onto a single clear filmstrip to build colour up.

4. The multi-plane camera - a motion picture camera that was used in the traditional animation process that moves a number of pieces of artwork past the camera at various speeds and at various distances from one another. Various parts of the artwork are left transparent to allow other layers to be seen behind them. The movements are calculated and photographed frame by frame. This creates depth. Vertical camera.

Stages of production in snow white

  1. The brothers Grimm write the story of snow white
  2. Silent film version of snow white released in 1934 (live action)
  3. Walt Disney pitching the idea of snow white to his workers who were skeptical of the film which eventually won them over
  4. Storyboard of the film, drawing out individual frames, getting an idea of he film
  5. Designing of the characters, creating the dwarfs and snow white
  6. Making the soundtrack for the movie 

Foley is the process of making sounds that dont exist

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