Web Premier: Charity Pictures

July 29th, 2008

Charity PicturesCharity Pictures is a local Phoenix nonprofit organization “designed to improve the quality of life for civilization”. Charity Pictures also severely needed a website makeover. This is a project I’ve been plotting and doodling ideas for over a year since they were originally going to have me do it. There were tons of ideas for designs. We needed something that looked cool and related to motion pictures.

The original idea was to have an entire desk with interactive props sitting on top of it. Each prop, such as a camera, or a reel of film, would take you to a gallery related to that medium when you clicked on it. The challenge was taking a real photo of a charity pictures desk and cutting out each prop in a way that could later be programmed interactive. If you’ve visited the Read More...






Web Premier: Demitre Garza

July 18th, 2008

Not even a week before the official launch of demitregarza.com, I met with this local Phoenix visual effects artist, Demitre Garza. Not only was this week his 21st birthday, but he was also graduating with is bachelors at Collins College. Now he needed a place on the web to show off his demo reels. I’m not the only person that knows how to use Photoshop; Demitre began putting together a design. The original plan was to have about four or five different pages: home, reel #1, reel #2, resume, and contact. The design was good, but we didn’t use it.

After almost four days (eight different website designs), we began to worry if the design would take longer than the actual website development. I sat down in front of Photoshop that evening and created another new website design (Design 9). This time, I made two pages. Each page Read More...






FLV Slow Motion Playback Test

July 13th, 2008

FLV Slow Motion PlaybackBy request I’ve begun developing a Flash video player with slow motion playback cababilities. There are a number of ways to achieve this effect using either Flash or Flex. One way to get slow motion is to simply keep pausing and playing the video at a specific rate. Another way I’ve discovered is to record the currently playing area of the video stream into a bitmap data cache. Then you could just pause the currently playing video and overlay the cached bitmap data, so it appears as if the bitmap data was the actual video object, even though it’s not. Since the second method sounds much more complicated, I decided to give the first method a shot. Surprisingly, the results weren’t as bad as I expected. I have embedded the resulting SWF demonstration in this Read More...