Photoshop “Cut Out”
I had an image in my head of the outside of a house while a party was going on so, I grabbed a picture of a house out off of CreativeCommons. I selected each window, and copy/pasted as new layers to create a total of three layers per window. I used the paint bucket tool to color each layer and blended it with the “color burn” option to create that transparency. Then, using the timeline, I dragged and positioned each layer in the timeline so that the windows rotate through all of the different colored layers.
I think this works pretty well – I wish I had found a suitable picture of a house at night because I think that would have worked a little bit better.

Adobe Animate: “Onion-skinning”
Wow. This one was hard. After compleating nearly 100 frames, I was really surprised to see how quickly this animation cycles through because it felt like it took forever to complete. I tried to stick to basic shapes because I was drawing with my finger. I eventually grabbed a stylus, but that didn’t yield better results. If there is one portion of this animation that I think works well, it has to be the solid blue circle that expands and decreases in size because it is the smoothest portion of this GIF.
For this, I just followed the basic tutorial that was posted on Blackboard. I changed the number of frames that the “onion skin” expands over so that I could see the entirety of the animation while I was drawing. I feel like there must be tools that make this easier, but I think that for a first time, it came out alright.

Adobe Animate: “Tweening”
I’m really digging the way this one came out for a first try. Again, I followed the basic tutorial that was posted to Blackboard but wanted to kind of push myself a little bit more on this one. I got the idea after disposing of (another) plant that I couldn’t keep alive. I set up the scene, copied the original frames, and pasted them. I then moved a petal halfway to the table, copied THOSE frames, and pasted it in again and moved the petal to the table. I tried to convey the drop of each petal by rotating the pieces and sizing them down to when they hit the table. A ‘classic tween’ was applied in-between each frame that has a new stage in the animation. The only thing that is annoying, is that the entire scene drops down right before the last petal falls and I’m not sure why. I re-checked my frames and it doesn’t seem like that movement it visible there. I also was expecting the motion of the tween to look a little bit more natural and smooth, so if I were to re-do this, I’d probably want to look up ways to improve on that.


I chose this one because I loved the really smooth, natural motion of the feet and legs, as well as the way in which the droplet of milk fading out adds to the direction in which we can assume the character it walking.
I was pretty keen on this one because of the motion involved in the pool of water beneath the cloud and how it kind of swells and dissipates to nothing so smoothly.

























