Yay, springtime has finally arrived! With that I wanted to post on a little animation featuring spring themes that are very "little" indeed. In fact, this animation is so tiny it holds the Guiness Book of World Record's achievement for being the "world's smallest stop-motion animation". Please enjoy, Dot:
I love the bumble-bee ride over the ocean of pencil shavings. :)
Dot herself is only 10cm tall!...
Much too tiny to manipulate in any traditional way, so instead 50 different poses of her were created using the resin drippings of a 3D printer (cool)...
...painstakingly painted, and then switched in and out of each frame to simulate her movement. Any smaller and her tiny appendages would not be able to stay attached.
The entire movie was shot on a Nokia 8 cell phone with a microscope. That's right, a cell phone. It's specifically called a CellScope, invented by Professor Daniel Fletcher and his team at Berkley. It allows for doctors in developing nations to snap pictures of magnified blood samples and send them to anywhere in the world for instant analysis. It's brilliant, and it saves lives.
Ed Patterson and Will Studd, a team of duo-directors who call themselves "Sumo Science", were hired under Aardman studios to shoot the film (yay for Wallace and Grommit :) ). On average they shot about 4 seconds of animation per day, meaning it must have taken them about one month of shooting to complete the whole thing. Not too shabby.
Both Ed Patterson and Will Studd graduated from UWE Bristol, and since then have been working under Aardman Studios helping out on such projects as Wallace & Gromit, Planet Sketch, Purple & Brown, and animating various commercials.
Have you ever seen those shorts of Purple & Brown on YouTube? Ah, the hilarity:
Sumo Science uses traditional stop-motion techniques with everyday objects and sometimes 2D animation. I had a chance to look at some of their past work and I especially like their Innocent Orange Juice ad:
Apparently these commercials are so popular in Britain they have a few parodies. Here's one for fun. :)
"Plump... and ready to burst." Mmm, I want an orange.
Here's a funny "Stuff vs. Stuff" episode. They're only vegetables, but you can't help but grimace when they get hurt:
Here are some of Sumo Science's creative Idents meant to occur in between commercial breaks:
And finally, here are two animations of theirs I just like: The first is simply called, Plates. The second is a 2D animation of glowing Clockwork Plankton. Very dreamy:
Have you ever seen such creativity be expressed by two people in so many diverse ways? Each animation is as unique and original as the next. It's good to know that stop-motion and 2D animation are not dead--quite the opposite; in fact, these styles seem to be teeming with new methods and fresh ideas coming from all over the place.
I have no doubt Sumo Science will continue to be a leader in the forefront of this stop-motion "reawakening"; constantly brightening our days with the cooky antics of their characters and the colorfulness of their imaginations. It is a welcome renaissance.
~S