Categories
Project 1: Animation

Syeda’s Animation

Risograph animation of three roommates meeting outside in front of their home

Rows of small thumbnails of frames
First contact sheet for May Be Unholy opening scene
Rows of small thumbnails of frames
Second contact sheet for May Be Unholy opening scene

For this animation assignment, I chose to work with the opening scene of a short film I directed, May Be Unholy. This was a film I worked on while I was a Post-Baccalaureate Fellow at Barnard College’s Media Center. This project was especially memorable, because I got to work with my friends and we were a team of women and non-binary filmmakers.

This was my first time ever printing with the Riso. I actually used a different clip originally, which was the last scene of May Be Unholy. I used cyan and red as my print colors and grouped the warm and cool channels separately on Photoshop. Unfortunately, the printer kept jamming and whatever managed to print came out as a big blob. I think this happened, because the footage itself was quite dark and I didn’t think to brighten it in Photoshop.

For my second attempt, I switched over to the opening scene instead (the one shown above). I brightened the footage in Premiere and further readjusted the levels in Photoshop. I grouped the channels the same way as before, but I used magenta and green inks this time around. This was because most of the outdoor scene was greenery and I wanted the heart-shaped sunglasses to really pop out. This attempt was much more successful!

Reanimating the frames in Photoshop was fascinating. I had no idea how everything would come together with just the frames from our physical contact sheets. I was surprised by how misaligned and washed out the contact sheets were. Thankfully, the color correction and frame alignment tools fixed a lot of it. I was also surprised by how much the frames differed in size; in class, I learned that the sheets must’ve been converted to 11” x 17” at some point in the prep process, throwing off the original 10.5” x 16.5” dimensions. In addition, the process of resizing individual frames to flow slightly better became a tedious process, though I think it was definitely worth it.

In all, I think the final animation is really cool, even if the output is really grainy and jumpy at times. Plus the overall process wasn’t as daunting as I thought it would be. I shared the GIF with some of the folks on set and they all loved the animation!