Saturday, 28 February 2015

Film/TV Graphic Designer of the Week - Henry Hobson.


The latest adaptation of the disney classic, 'Snow White' was re-made into 'Snow white and the huntsman', I have only just been able to watch this amazing film starring Kristen Stewart.



Snow White & the Huntsman - Titles from The Mill on Vimeo.


' THE POWER OF DARK IMAGES 
Turn your lights down low, and turn your volume up high because the end credit sequence of Snow White and the Huntsman is, by far, the darkest end credit sequence we ever featured on Watch the Titles. Combining high-speed phantom footage, elements from the film, CGI, and a custom designed font, The Mill L.A. created an intensely dark and truly gothic sequence that submerges the viewer in the mythical battle between good and evil. Watch the Titles talked to Creative Director Henry Hobson (RANGO) about the power of dark images.
Disney's "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" was the first movie I ever saw in the cinemas and it made a big impact. I asked Hobson if he has any personal memories of the story of Snow White.“Indeed, between the terror of Snow White and Bambi my childhood was forever traumatized,” kids Hobson, who recalls the powerful images of Disney's evil queen, and the forest with its creeping knurled branches. The 21st century update of the age-old tale “channels a lot of darkness,” according to Hobson. “There are some really classically scary moments that retain that childlike fear factor.”
Production 
The Mill [Mill Film London] had been doing work on the Mirror Man –the personal seer of The Queen– and on other visual effects (VFX) within the movie itself. But the company had never done a major movie title sequence from start to finish. 

When they were offered the titles, The Mill invited Henry Hobson to collaborate with The Mill's Creative Director Andrew Proctor and his team on the sequence. Hobson, who has built a solid reputation as a title designer based on his work for movies such as RANGO and Robin Hood, says this project was “just too good to pass up.” 



There were phletora of early ideas for the credit sequence, recalls Hobson, “From medieval animated worlds, a journey through ice and snow, with nature being overrun by icy folds and creeping cold, blood in snow and book-like painterly travels.”

 But the best concept was an idea that focused strongly on the fight between light and dark, with bold typography. 

“After Rupert Sanders, the Director, saw the power of those dark images, he wanted to just stick solely in that world. Almost complete darkness, punctuated by fire and fighting.”
The almost abstract imagery hold a magnifying glass to the details of the characters and the intricate details from Coleen Atwood's costume designs that were so integral to the look of the film. 
Combined with a realistic high-speed sequence of an authorial battle scene, thte titles emphasize the epic battle between good and evil.  From a VFX standpoint, the greatest challenge was to create a high speed macro shot of the ‘shattering‘ of the dark knights into shards of obsidian. Instead of months, the design team pulled it off with a macro level of detail in a 10th of the time.

Phantom Raven
The creative team used the phantom camera –an ultra-high-speed digital video camera– to explore the textures and micro details of the dark knights' armor in incredible detail. 
“The shoot with a fat raven called Shug, a Charlize Theron lookalike and a bunch of knights and dark soldiers in beautiful Colleen Atwood costumes was pretty special,” says Hobson.“In terms of shooting, the trickiest element was filming the raven. When shooting phantom you only get the tiniest of moments to get the action you need, so working with an animal to get the performance you're after in a split second takes a lot of patience, dedication and ingenuity.”Any title designer will agree that creating a custom font or type treatment can make a title sequence really stand out. A typeface can evoke an emotion or an atmosphere, a genre, a style, or a time period. “Pablo Ferro's handwriting is a key example,” says Hobson, “they became so iconic that no one can echo it. ”

For Snow White, Hobson and his team rebuilt a classic serif typeface, Bodoni.

“The brief was to get a feminine font with a hard edge. After playing around with existing fonts, we found that Bodoni had a really nice feel to it, a stylish vibe and some nice detail. But even then it was distinctly feminine. So the solution was to rebuild it.

 

Manija Emran –also a Creative Director at The Mill L.A.– started by thickening up the letters and played with the form. Each letterform went through dozens of revisions. Drawing from elements within the film, swords, branches and shields, medieval iconography the typeface began to take shape. 

“The final font was titled Ravenna after the evil queen in the film. It is bold and dramatic, yet subdued to match the multifaceted character and her intriguing steadfast ways. ”The Main Title uses a different typeface

What's next Henry? I read that you will be directing two feature films.
Hobson confirms. “Maggie is set to shoot later in the year. It's a tough emotional zombie drama with a highly original twist, set to star Chloe Moretz and Paddy Considine. After Maggie, I have a film set up at 20th Century Fox Studios called Caves of Steel, which is based on the Isaac Asimov book.” 


About Henry Hobson
After graduating from the Royal College of Art in London, the UK-born designer and director Henry Hobson started working at Why Not Associates in London, doing everything from sculptural objects and designing postage stamps, to title design. A series of commercials he created for the BBC got him on the radar of Prologue, Kyle Cooper's studio. Hobson was “snapped up and transported out to L.A.,” he says, where he worked as a creative director and graphic designer on a series of distinctive title sequences that combined old school analogue handiwork with cutting-edge digital techniques, including RANGO, The Walking Dead, Robin Hood, Fright Night and Sherlock Holmes.
In 2010 Hobson left Prologue to pursue other creative avenues with a live action emphasis. He directed a viral teaser for Resistance 3, and lately titles for SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN. Hobson is currently busy working on prepping his first two feature film directing projects: Maggie is set to shoot in 2012. "It's a tough emotional zombie drama with a highly original twist, set to star Chloe Moretz and Paddy Considine," says Hobson. "After Maggie, I have a film set up at 20th Century Fox Studios called Caves of Steel, which is based on the Isaac Asimov book.” '

Vlaanderen, R. (2012). Snow White and the Huntsman. Retrieved from http://watchthetitles.com/articles/00241-Snow_White_And_The_Huntsman.

Friday, 27 February 2015

Interesting find of the Week - NHS


I found these image online whilst actually looking for a poster I have recently seen on billboards across the UK, these image I felt blends in well with what I am currently writing about in my essay for Theory as Practise. Mental illness is a serious problem and people who don't suffer struggle to understand it is hard work to deal with this, as I cope with it on a daily basis, many people I know also suffer with a form of mental illness as back in my hometown, it is in the top 3 for worst case mental illness' than anywhere else in the UK. What do you think? 











Wednesday, 25 February 2015

Artist of the Week - Katharine Asher


This week's artist of the week, is none other than the amazingly talented Katharine Asher, who is an illustrator artist. This beautiful image looks as if it was done in pencil then outlined in a fine-liner and then covered in watercolored paint, the image is so simple, yet beautiful; the black and grey colours symbolise mourning however the dresses style makes me feel it is an star studded event as I would compare it to the below image of the oscars 2014 containing Charlize Theron, Emma Watson, Anna Kendrick.


http://www.illustrationweb.com/artists/KatharineAsher/view

Sunday, 22 February 2015

Photographer of the Month - Urban Photography


When I have been researching into different types of photography there is a new form of photography called urban instagram photography, this is when artists showcase their work through massive social media app called instagram. I got all these screen grabs from the following website it is worth having a look, http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2014/feb/06/urban-instagram-photographers-you-should-follow