From Imaginary Forces: “The titles for Little Fires Everywhere delivers on the name itself as we indulged our inner pyromania. Shot at high speed, it’s a ballet of burning objects, tumbling, floating, and falling through frame. [Watch]
Join Antibody CD Patrick Clair as he walks Stash fans through his thoughtful title update for season 3 of HBO’s sci-fi mind-bender Westworld including imagery generated using AI and machine learning. [Watch]
Stay home, stay inspired! Take a peek at this two-minute preview of STASH 140 which adds another 31 motion projects (plus behind the scenes features and exclusive interviews) to over 5,500 titles included in The Stash Permanent Collection. [Watch]
Category 3D Style, Advertising, Animation, Brand film, Branded Content, Broadcast Design, BTS, CG, Character Animation, Explainer, Featured, Illustration, Motion Design, Music Video, Processing, Short Films, Stop Motion, Student Work, Titles, VFX · Tags Aardman, Charline Parisot, CLAN Team, Drasik Studio, Elastic, Electric Theatre Collective, Fabian&Fred, Fioretta Caterina Cosmidis, Flore Allier-Estrada, Found Studio, Gentleman Scholar, Gimmick Studio, Hornet, Imaginary Forces, InferStudio, Jérémy Cissé, Little Minx, Maud Lemaître-Blanchart, MIXCODE, MPC, Noam Sussman, Oddfellows, Oh Yeah Wow, Passion Animation, SIMON & PAUL, Swiss, TAIKO Studios, The Acid House, The Mill, Thiago Miranda, Wicked Pixels, XK Studio
From Imaginary Forces: “How do you make a portrait of one of the most admired and vilified women of the world? Well, if it’s Hillary Clinton, you raid filmmaker Nanette Burstein’s archive of personal and press photos, stack ’em in chronological order, and let ’em play! [Watch]
Elastic creative director Jeff Han tells Stash how chess became the metaphor for the strategic battle between post-war Nazis and Al Pacino’s team of “Hunters” in the titles of Amazon’s new original series. [Watch]
Art Director/designer/lead animator Peter Pak at Digital Kitchen in Los Angeles: “The Godfather of Harlem main title is an homage to the collages created by African-American artist, Romare Bearden (1911-1988), during 1960s Harlem. [Watch]