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(19 reviews)
Author: Yael Braha
ISBN : 0240814193
New from $24.39
Format: PDF, EPUB
Posts about Download The Book Free Download Creative Motion Graphic Titling for Film, Video, and the Web: Dynamic Motion Graphic Title Design for everyone book with Mediafire Link Download Link
Captivate your audience and enhance your storytelling with this tutorial based 4-color cookbook, featuring dozens of solutions to your titling needs. Each chapter includes case studies and interviews with the pros, lending cutting insight and lessons learned that will have you creating inspired title sequences in no time.
The book features genre-based tutorial sections, with step by step instructions for creating effective horror, comedy, drama, and suspense titling sequences. Tutorials for creating some of the most popular title sequences in blockbuster movies are included (Se7en, The Sopranos, 24, The Matrix). Other tutorials teach you how to effectively use sound and VFX in your titles, and also included is instruction on editing your title sequence. These techniques, as well as chapters on the essentials of typography allow you to apply these lessons to your title sequence regardless of whether it's for TV, the web, or digital signage.
Also included is a DVD with sample clips, as well as project files that allow you to refine the techniques you learned in the book. As an added bonus we've included 3 titling chapters from other Focal books, with specific instructions on titling within certain software applications.
Cover images provided by MK12, from The Alphabet Conspiracy. Learn more at www.MK12.com
Download latest books on mediafire and other links compilation Free Download Creative Motion Graphic Titling for Film, Video, and the Web: Dynamic Motion Graphic Title Design [Paperback]
- Paperback: 416 pages
- Publisher: Focal Press; 1 edition (September 16, 2010)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0240814193
- ISBN-13: 978-0240814193
- Product Dimensions: 0.9 x 7.5 x 10 inches
- Shipping Weight: 2.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Free Download Creative Motion Graphic Titling for Film, Video, and the Web: Dynamic Motion Graphic Title Design
This is a Focal Press book, so I had expected it to be much better than run of the mill. Unfortunately, it is run of the mill or slightly below.
I hate to say it, but the title is the best part of the book.
The authors clearly bit off far more than they could chew.
Titles are inherently graphic and for the past 70 years or so, many titles, especially for bigger productions, incorporated motion as well. Think, for example, of the James Bond movie titles. You know this book is in trouble when you see the first 19 pages are solid text - in a section that includes references to the titles of eight movies as examples and several techniques as well. A bit later they have a 12 page chapter on the history of film titles, with as single non-relevant title card shown.
The authors simply try to cram too much into the book and, as a result, fail to cover any subject well. For example, they pretend to address modifying text in Adobe Illustrator and creating your own font in Fontlab - in two pages. Good luck.
They assume no experience on the part of the user, which is fatal. Adobe After Effects, which is probably one of the top five motion graphics programs, if not the top, is extremely complex. If you have to teach someone the difference between raster and vector images, that someone is not ready for After Effects. But they do that here, along with "teaching" about Photoshop layers, color theory, lighting, importing text, editing and a legion of other subjects, none of which are accorded any serious attention.
They also include some of the most inane interviews I have ever read, featuring questions such as "How do your life experience, interests, and passions influence your work? And what re your interests and passions?
This book tries to do too many things and doesn't succeed. It's good for a total novice as an overview of the creative process and various tools and techniques used in production, but it's grossly lacking on in-depth detail and substantive tutorials. If you are looking for a hands-on technical book that shows you how to accomplish amazing effects or reproduce famous ones, skip this. Most of the book is needless padding and the remainder of the tutorials just whizzes by at breakneck speed, with about a page devoted to each effect. Instead, it is filled with unnecessary background filler like "the creative process" (the concept pitch and storyboarding), then goes on to aspect ratios, a history of titles, typography (kerning, leading). I don't want to read about the history of the Western alphabet, color theory, or serif fonts and fixed-width fonts. It explains x-height, stroke weight, faux italics, even uppercase/lowercase. This is how basic the book is. If you need this kind of basic level introduction to concepts and terminology, you are not ready for After Effects, Cinema 4D, Illustrator, or Flash.
It promises Creative Motion Graphic Titling for Film, Video, and the Web, but really doesn't deliver very well on most of those claims. I'm a web developer and animator, so I can speak to the web portion most. There's a lot you can do with Flash, either using it alone to do animation (either vector, raster, or both), or incorporating outside video. Sadly, the entirety of this discussion is confined to a paltry 4 or 5 pages. It shows you how to make an object, convert it to a symbol, then do a motion tween. This is all on one page, with no explanation behind what those major concepts are. To someone who's never done this, this is about as enlightening as Morse Code is to a mountain gorilla.
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