![]() ![]() The thumbnail I posted to the AnimatedGIFAssignment880: Multi-Frame GIF Story was made with four frames taken from a screen capture video of the completed GIFs once they were posted, just to give the idea. I tried to isolate one main visual idea in each one, although the third and fourth are pretty similar, just made from different sets of frames. The six GIFs are basically in sequence from the original video. Neat, eh? Now I want to do this with a movie. Maybe I’ll revisit this when I’m out of other ideas for GIFestivus2012. I wonder how this might be different if I applied the “less is more” approach, say three or four key frames per GIF.The big plume in the upper left was the result of a little photoshop editing. I thought it would be neat to envision how this might look with a longer sequence of darkness. The fifth panel was made using a small number of sporadic frames that existed as the lights shorted out now and then in the original clip.I guess you maybe need them for really, really long songs. I didn’t know that you could get electric metronomes.Some thoughts, just as I finish finagling these six GIFs into a nice table so they can be viewed in tandem. I’ve always wondered what Beaker did to get his hair like that. But it also tells a nice visual story here from this short muppet clip. It seems like an excellent way to highlight important themes or details within a longer narrative, like a movie (hint, hint). ![]() Thanks to Jim Groom for pointing me at the multi-framed GIF story idea. As well as providing another submission for the Animated GIF Assignment 856: Muppet GIF assignment, it’s also going to reflect a new Animated GIF Assignment 880: Multi-Frame GIF Story. The ds106 Digital Storytelling GIFfest (known as GIFestivus2012 around here) continues, this time with a two-fer.
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