To start the year off with a zing of creativity, the popular interactive artistic forum Pecha Kucha returns for its sixth installment. Organized by traffic, S*uce, and The Third Line, the evening will include 9 presenters from various creative fields. Photographers, a traveling teddy bear, a graphic comic artist and a children’s art organizationton name just a few will be part of the line up.
Pecha Kucha follows a 20×20 format which allows each of the evening’s presenters to showcase 20 images ‚ each shown for exactly 20 seconds. This gives the presenter 6 minutes and 40 seconds of much deserved fame before switching over to the next participant. Originating in Japan, Pecha Kucha (pronounced-peh-chak-cha) is Japanese for ‘chatter’ and was devised and shared by Klein Dytham architecture.
For more information please call 04 3411 367, or visit their website.
If you are designer, tech-geek and a lover of toast, surely Othmar Muhlebach‘s toaster-printer MUST be your wet dream..???
Simply hook it up to your laptop (we’re holding out for a WiFi version) – load up a picture and send to the toaster – “print” the picture on your toast – continue watching The Goonies while eating your toast. Genius.
You know how it goes. “I’d like to thank my producer, God, mama & papa, and all my fans.. *sob-sob-botoxed smile*
Yawn… We’ve heard it before, a gazillion times.
But some people actually make an effort.
A recent example of a cool acceptance speech was Wes Anderson’s for his film Fantastic Mr. Fox, that he, naturally, did as a stop-motion animation. Obvious, yes, but still cool.
But without a doubt the best recent “speech” was delivered by Fever Ray, after winning the Swedish award P3 Guld’s dance category the other day. Like her music, her acceptance speech is sheer brilliance.
Tell us what your favorite acceptance speech of all time!
Over at Aetuts+ they have over time collected a respectable amount of articles, tutorials, tips and tricks etc. Something that I’ve found really cool were these articles where they list and briefly describe who’s who in post. Two of the articles are AE focused, where as the other two are geared towards the major international post and VFX houses. Obviously they missed listing one or two facilities, like this major, major, über cool place called Rolling Thunder, for example hehe. Anywho, lot’s of goodness to be had in the below links in the forms of reels, resources etc, so czech it outtah!
A time long time ago – before Facebook, celebrity blogs and Twitter – the uncontended office timewaster extraordinaire was a small game, known as Tetris! In those days Tetris ruled supreme. I remember, fondly, how we used to have small tournaments when the boss looked away (sorry Magnus, but apparently Tetris increases brain activity, so maybe it wasn’t a complete waste hehe). After a while it got a bit out of hand, and we all had to quit, using the Tetris 12-step program, but that’s a different story.
Anyway, enough with the sentimentality. Today I came across a completely new form of Tetris, the First-Person Tetris, or FPT. Give it a try HERE, it’s definitely more of a challenge than the original! But in this economic climate you’re probably better off only playing during lunch hehe. And don’t play drunk.
Apparently Photoshop turns 20 one of these days! Here’s über-legend John Knoll (founder of Photoshop and VFX wizard at ILM) reminiscing about the good ol’ days. Oh you get some bonus comments about his views on stereoscopic cinema etc as well.
There’s a lot that can be said about the boutique studios in Dubai Studio City – the strange concept of sharing the kitchenette and bathrooms with another office; the way they built the wall on the sizable roof top too low so they can’t allow people to go there; the over all design of the building. And there’s more.
But instead of complaining, we thought we would share a snap of the façade, where they, perhaps humorously, decided to call the buildings BS. For boutique studio, of course.. Who would ever have any other idea?
So if you’re ever keen to pop by, we’re in BS 08. And we promise things are far better on the inside.