2 Heads Are Better Than 1

I love to create. Especially collaboratively. Sometimes it gets tricky when you have too many cooks in the kitchen, but I find that good ideas get reinforced with the right people at the table. Likewise, bad ideas get the axe before you waste too much time and energy going in the wrong direction.

At Awaken, almost everything is accomplished in teams of some sort. When we plan a new series or produce a video, it’s even more important that everyone is “fishing in the same stream.” There have been times when I’ve pitched an idea that sounded solid to me, but when I brought it to the team, for whatever reason, it is became obvious that the idea was incompatible with the focus of the project. Such is the nature of an idea.

You have to wade through them to find the ones that just leap off the page. That said, I’m currently working with a friend of mine at Awaken to collaborate on the art for the next series.  To give credit where credit is due, he did all of the work to create the scene, 3D text with beautiful shading, etc.

Here’s what he came up with:

He gave me permission (very important when working as a team) to play around with it.   So I did. It may not be the finished product, but it gives us options.                               Here’s what I came up with:

While the contents stayed the same (with the exception of the wind turbines), the effects change the tone entirely.

I wanted to give it a slightly different story. Something vintage, magical and worn.

Here’s an overview of what I did:
  • added film scratches (using a paint tool at a low opacity)
  • added blotches (also paint tool at low opacity but bigger in size)
  • a very light but dirty vignette (just a layer of brown via paint bucket brought down to an opacity of 20% and soft eraser also at a low opacity across the crest of the hill)
  • and some “fast” clouds (inspired by intro and outro of Toy Story 3, thank you Ed Catmull also using the paint tool, a subtle white glow and the smudge tool)

I seriously love the 3D text that my friend created. I didn’t want to lose all the work that went into making that but I wanted to accentuate the series title more than anything.  Using the blur tool, I swept across the lower third of the graphic at decreasing intensities as I worked upward towards the crest of the hill. This effectively miniaturizes the piece and gives it a unique depth of field.

If you remember one thing from this post, remember this:

Subtle vignettes do a really good job in assisting your audience towards the focal point. Frame the focus with a vignette and you instantly make your concept more accessible to the viewer.

Final Thought:  Art is subjective. What I did, you may hate. You may love. Artistic collaboration takes three things:

  1. holding your art loosely
  2. humility
  3. willingness to go with the better idea, even if it’s not yours

Good luck and play nice.

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