Co-directors Softly Dunstan and Darren Price at Mighty Nice in Sydney use a smart mix of 3D and watercolor illustration to leverage the package designs of Proud & Punch frozen treats into a series of short and charming animated spots. [Watch]
Ruffmercy, the UK animator/director (and Stash regular) best known for his music video work, lets loose with a magnum opus called “’88,” a gloriously chaotic 11-minute film made for The Barbican’s Jean-Michel Basquiat retrospective in London. [Watch]
A very fresh visual treatment for a motorsports broadcast promo here from Tokyo 3D masters Onesal for coverage of the World Rally Championship 2018 on the Japanese channel J Sports. [Watch]
Grab a look at the preview for STASH 134 , the brilliant new addition to The Stash Permanent Collection – the unrivalled online library of motion design for advertising, music videos, broadcast and title design, brand films, game cinematics, and short films. [Watch]
Category Advertising, Animation, Brand film, Broadcast Design, BTS, CG, Character Animation, Explainer, Featured, Games, Motion Design, Music Video, Short Films, Titles, VFX · Tags Art Camp, ATK PLN, August Niclasen, Aylen Solander, Ben Collier-Marsh, Blacklist, Blacksmith, BlinkInk, C A T K, Elastic, Filmograph, Guilherme Marcondes, Huge Designs, Jocie Juritz, Joel Plosz, Johnny Kelly, Joyrider, Lili des Bellons, Lobo, Loop, Luca & Sinem, Michel Gondry, MPC, Nexus, Nice Shit Studio, Not to Scale, Olivier Gondry, Partizan, Platige, Platige Image, Psyop, Raman Djafari, Reuben Sutherland, Ridley Scott, Saad Moosajee, Santi Zoraidez, SUN CREATURE, The Animation Workshop, The Mill, Thinh Nguyen, Timon Chapelon, Valere Amirault, Vincent Schwenk, Vitaly Grossmann, WeCanMake, WIZZ
Taiwanese motion graphic designer and SCAD graduate student Celia Hsu contemplates the effects of environment on our emotions in her introspective yet dynamic animated short film “Perception.” [Watch]
Nate Sherman and Nick Vokey, the creative duo behind “Fired on Mars” (one of my favorite animated shorts of the decade) are back with another fabulous look at social norms/weirdness in the lowkey black comedy “Wet City.” [Watch]