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Unique, believable characters that think, feel, and captivate your
audience are ones that involve emotion, personality, and story.
Successful animators balance all of these elements within a single
character and narrative. With Acting and Performance for Animation,
discover how to create dynamic, dramatic performances and
believable character interaction for 2D and 3D animation and motion
capture. An invaluable resource, Acting and Performance for
Animation is a practical guide to the variety of performance
techniques relevant to animators. Develop believable character
interactions with chapters detailing the principles of performance,
performance types, character emotion and personality, physical and
psychological performance, and scene composition. Analyze scripts,
sound, acting, action and performance with hints, tips, and
animated examples featured in an extensive guide for animators
working in film, TV, games, and commercials. Explore different
performance techniques based upon the experiences of seasoned
animators and actors with case studies featuring Peter Lord, John
Stevenson, Marco Marenghi, Mark Baker, Neville Astley, Joanna
Quinn, and more.
Using more than five hundred historical maps from collections
around the world, this stunning book is the first to tell the story
of America's past from a unique geographical perspective. Covering
more than half a millennium in U.S. history - from conception to
colonization to Hurricane Katrina - this atlas documents the
discoveries and explorations, the intrigue and negotiations, the
technology and the will that led the United States to become what
it is today. Richly detailed, visually breathtaking maps are
accompanied by extended captions that elucidate the stories and
personalities behind their creation. Coasts and mountains, rivers
and lakes, and peaks and plains are described by explorers
encountering them for the first time. These maps can convey
explorers' ideas of what lay over the mountains ahead, their
notions about what was discovered, and their explanations of the
land's potential for sponsors back home. The maps can also show a
promoter's attempt to sell his project to settlers or a general's
assessment of a coming battle. They chart the wars that created and
molded the country: the French and Indian War and the War for
Independence; the Mexican and Civil Wars; the numerous Indian wars;
as well as more localized battles of conquest and survival. Readers
can follow the progression of map creation and design as more
knowledge was gained about the American continent. Distilling an
enormous amount of information into one handsome volume, the
"Historical Atlas of the United States" highlights the evolution of
geographical knowledge at the same time that it presents a
fascinating chronicle of the expansion and development of a nation.
Spectacular in scope and visually brilliant, this atlas presents a
sweeping history of the American West through more than 600
original, full-color maps and extended captions. From the earliest
human inhabitants and the first European explorers to the national
parks and retirement resorts of today, this extensive collection
chronicles the West from uncharted territory to a well-populated
Eden. We bear witness as state lines strike through Native American
territories, see the frontier crack open and the railroad's iron
belt snake across the Plains, and watch as the West's cities, from
Los Angeles to Las Vegas and Albuquerque to Anchorage, rise and
prosper. This is the first atlas to compile all the historically
significant maps relating to the American West; it includes field
sketches of battles, the first maps to show the West, maps
depicting mythical rivers and fictional towns, and maps showing
early conceptions of California as an island. Distilling many
centuries into one fascinating volume, this atlas traces history as
redwoods, mountains, and deserts become California, Montana, and
Arizona, and offers a rare opportunity to see the west through the
eyes of its earliest explorers.
Character animation involves more than the principles of animation
and the mechanics of motion. As an animator, you've just been asked
to animate a scene where a character arrives to work, late. While
you know how to animate the character's movements, how should the
character enter into the scene? Does the character enter slowly?
Quickly? Doggedly determined? Hesitantly? Is he frustrated, or
merely apathetic? What is the larger context for the character
being late? The answers to these questions can certainly affect how
to animate you character. Unique, believeable characters that
think, feel and captivate your audience are ones that involve
emotion, performance, personality, acting and story. Successful
animators balance all of these elements within a single character
and narrative. With Acting and Performance for Animation, discover
how to create dynamic, dramatic performances and believeable
character interaction. An invaluable resource for animators, Acting
and Performance for Animators is a practical guide to the variety
of performance techniques relevant to animators. Develop believable
character interactions with chapters detailing the principles of
performance, performance types, character emotion and personality,
physical and psychological performance, and scene composition.
Analyze scripts, sound, acting, action and performance with the
practical hints and tips, hands-on assignments and animated
examples featured in an extensive guide for animators working in
film, TV, games and commercials. Explore different performance
techniques based upon the experiences of seasoned animators with
case studies featuring John Lasseter, Ray Harryhausen, Nick Park,
Joanna Quinn. Expand your own performance techniques with the
accompanying DVD which will feature live action reference shorts,
production stills, animated examples, and further hands-on
assignments.
Using nearly five hundred historical maps and many other
illustrations - from rough sketches drawn in the field to
commercial maps to beautifully rendered works of art - this
lavishly illustrated volume is the first to tell the story of
California's past from a unique visual perspective. Covering five
hundred years of history, it offers a compelling and informative
look at the transformation of the state from before European
contact through the Gold Rush and up to the present. The maps are
accompanied by a concise, engaging narrative and by extended
captions that elucidate the stories and personalities behind their
creation. At once a valuable reference and an exhilarating
adventure through history, the "Historical Atlas of California",
featuring many rare and unusual maps, will be a treasured addition
to any library. Distilling an enormous amount of information into
one volume, it presents a fascinating chronicle of how California
came to be what it is today.
This gorgeous atlas, illustrated throughout with more than 500
colorful images and maps, provides a visually rich and textually
engaging history of the states of Oregon and Washington. Derek
Hayes brings his enthusiasm and expertise to a full range of
topics, beginning with the first inhabitants and tracing the
westward expansion, conflict between settlers and Native Americans,
and the establishment of the Oregon Trail. We see in vivid images,
old maps, and lively text the coming of the railroads and the rapid
establishment of the coastal ports, northwest cities and roads, the
fur and lumber industries, and the large farms. We also witness the
twentieth-century development of the war industries, the
establishment of the aviation industry, and the celebratory 1962
Seattle World's Fair. At once a valuable reference and an
exhilarating adventure through history, the "Historical Atlas of
Washington and Oregon" presents readers with a fascinating
chronicle of how these proud states came into their own and how
they each look toward the future.
Early depictions of the West Coast were no more than cartographers'
fanciful guesses. Not until the discovery of "soft gold"-sea otter
pelts-and the quest to find a Northwest Passage did explorations,
such as the epic voyage of George Vancouver, lead to a better
understanding of the region's geography. Even so, until the gold
rush of 1858, the interior of the province was mostly unknown
except for the routes blazed by fur traders. Thirteen years later,
British Columbia became a province of Canada, and a
transcontinental railway was built to connect the land west of the
Rocky Mountains with the rest of the country. The efforts of these
early explorers, fur traders, gold seekers and builders involved
the production of maps that showed what they had found and what
they proposed to do. British Columbia: A New Historical Atlas
reveals the plans and strategies that created the province we know
today through a fascinating visual lens-from maps by early
Indigenous inhabitants and the Europeans who arrived to explore and
exploit vast resource wealth, to maps drawn by those who, decades
later, prepared for war, built dams, promoted real estate and even
tracked murders. Presented alongside award-winning historian Derek
Hayes's lively and authoritative text, this unprecedented
collection of over 900 maps plus 300 photos and historical
documents offers a unique, geographical history. This is the story
of both the dreams that came true and those that didn't-yet all are
part of the dramatic tale of the forging of Canada's western
frontier.
America's long romance with the train has been the subject of many
books, but none has used contemporary maps to comprehensively
illustrate the story. Until now. Here the latest of Derek Hayes's
historical atlases delves into the history of the railroad in North
America, from its origins in Britain in the 1820s and short lines
connecting Eastern Seaboard rivers in the 1830s to Amtrak and the
modern intermodal freights driving today's railroad revival.
Colorful and informative, the book covers a vast range of topics
and offers an impressive array of types of railroad map, from the
purely utilitarian to the gorgeously promotional. Nearly 400 old
railroad maps, most in full color, plus many historical photos,
brochures, and posters, combine to provide a new perspective on the
North American railroad. "Historical Atlas of the North American
Railroad" also explains how the railroad transformed the economic
and social life of a continent, fundamentally changing the two
North American nations it linked from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
From the early days of exploration and settlement to Canada's
participation in space exploration and the 2015 federal election,
this illustrated history conveys the drama and scope of the nation.
Through accessible commentary and a wealth of images, both
well-known and obscure facets of Canadian history are presented in
this splendid compendium. Read about Canada's first newspaper, the
Halifax Gazette, which, in its first iteration, was a single sheet
of paper. Find out which Canadian bridge collapsed not once, but
twice. Discover the nation's history of crime and punishment,
firefighting, the 25-cent and $50,000 bills, Prohibition, early
aviation, and much, much more. Here also are the tales of a myriad
of individuals who shaped Canada: the famous, the infamous, the
popular and the unknown. Hayes details stories of First Nations,
separatists and statesmen, astronauts and inventors, motorists,
mail carriers, fur traders, photographers and politicians. More
than 450 illustrations accompany the text, including 200-plus
photographs, 50-plus paintings and drawings (many by Canadian
artists) and 35 historic maps, as well as posters, stamps,
cartoons, stained glass and tapestries. Canada: An Illustrated
History is a visual experience every Canadian can enjoy.
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