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2018 matches in All Departments
Vectorworks for Entertainment Design covers the complete design
process for using Vectorworks in entertainment industry from
developing ideas, visualizing ideas, and evolving them for
execution. This second edition has been extensively revised and
updated, covering the most current details of the Vectorworks
software for scenery, lighting, sound, and rigging; real and
virtually. With a focused look at the production process from
ideation to development to documentation required for proper
execution, the book encourages readers to better create their own
processes and workflows through exercises that build on one
another. This new edition introduces Braceworks, SubDivision
modeling, and scripting using the Marionette tool, and covers new
tools such as Video Camera, Deform Tool, Camera Match, Schematic
Views, and Object Styles. Fully illustrated with step-by-step
instructions, this volume contains inspirational and aspirational
work from Broadway, Concerts, Regional Theatre, Dance, and
Experiential Entertainment. Exploring both the technical how-to and
the art of design, this book provides Theatre Designers and
Technicians with the tools to learn about the application and use
it professionally. Vectorworks for Entertainment Design also
includes access to downloadable resources such as exercise files
and images to accompany projects discussed within the book.
Theatrical Design: An Introduction is a guide for designers,
creatives, and artists to create a design idea for a project and
then audio/visually interpret and communicate that idea.
Emphasizing story analysis, creation, and interpretation
specifically for designers and artists, the narrative describes a
method to release meaning and design inspiration from story. After
interpretation, the artistic elements and principles of design -
the skills necessary to create the design - are laid out in clear
terms. Concepts are illustrated with examples from theatre, film,
art, architecture, and fashion that explore professional and
historic use of conceptualization and metaphor. Theatrical Design:
An Introduction imparts the tools all designers, in all pursuits,
need to innovate off the page. A textbook suitable for Art,
Architecture, Exhibitions, Interior Spaces, Culinary Presentation,
Design, Film, and Theatre university courses, general readers and
hobbyists will also find the methodology can be applied to any
creative pursuits.
Vectorworks for Entertainment Design covers the complete design
process for using Vectorworks in entertainment industry from
developing ideas, visualizing ideas, and evolving them for
execution. This second edition has been extensively revised and
updated, covering the most current details of the Vectorworks
software for scenery, lighting, sound, and rigging; real and
virtually. With a focused look at the production process from
ideation to development to documentation required for proper
execution, the book encourages readers to better create their own
processes and workflows through exercises that build on one
another. This new edition introduces Braceworks, SubDivision
modeling, and scripting using the Marionette tool, and covers new
tools such as Video Camera, Deform Tool, Camera Match, Schematic
Views, and Object Styles. Fully illustrated with step-by-step
instructions, this volume contains inspirational and aspirational
work from Broadway, Concerts, Regional Theatre, Dance, and
Experiential Entertainment. Exploring both the technical how-to and
the art of design, this book provides Theatre Designers and
Technicians with the tools to learn about the application and use
it professionally. Vectorworks for Entertainment Design also
includes access to downloadable resources such as exercise files
and images to accompany projects discussed within the book.
On 10 July 2018, exactly 100 years and 100 days after the formation
of the world's first independent air force, 103 aircraft of
twenty-four types from twenty-five squadrons flew over London in
the largest formation of military aircraft seen over the capital of
the UK in nearly thirty years. Involving over 250 aircrew and
operating out of fourteen military and two civilian airfields, with
nineteen back-up aircraft and a stand-by air-to-air refuelling
tanker, the Royal Air Force put on a unrivalled display to mark the
centenary of its creation on 1 April 1918, in the closing months of
the First World War. This book reveals how the flypast was
conceived and examines the detailed planning involved in the event,
written by someone who would know - the project manager and
coordinator. The composition and size of the flypast was truly
momentous, comprising virtually every type of aircraft that the RAF
operated at the time. As Chief of Staff at the Tornado GR4 Force
Headquarters operating from RAF Marham, and an experienced Tornado
GR4 Navigator, Wing Commander Kevin Gatland had the task of pulling
together all the necessary components, both military and civilian
required to produce an unrivalled aerial display. This involved
considering the feasibility of assembling so many varied types of
aircraft, all with different speeds and capabilities, in addition
to concentrating them into a tight schedule to produce a virtually
continuous stream of aircraft over central London. This book
reveals the story behind the the amazing spectacle that was
witnessed by the Queen from Buckingham Palace and the thousands who
gathered in The Mall or who watched at home.
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