Saturday, November 07, 2009

Exploding Rings Desktop



Here's my latest desktops i made in c4d. They are stills from an animation of those rings spinning around and then shattering. The second one took like 25 minutes to render just that frame. The first one was a little faster, but not much. I opted not to render out the entire animation. At least not yet.

Sunday, November 01, 2009

Working From Home


It's been a long time coming that I've been working towards having an efficient working setup from home. The past 5 years or more I've been using the laptop on my desk for all my design and video work, and that made sense since I was moving around a lot back then. This new setup will allow me to take work home from time to time (especially of late since I've been sick off and on.)

Last weekend the nyc crew came up to see our new apt, go bowling, and eat bbq. The last day they were here we started making a music video. I think the video was cooler than the song, but neither was really finished, and perhaps maybe I'll post the whole thing. Until then, this still says more than enough.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Desktops, Snow, Sickness...


An odd flu-like sickness has put me down the last couple days. Lotta couch time, and some illustrator when i'm in the mood. I've been working the last few months straight on these medical animations, so no time for anything to put online of my own, animation wise.

A second monitor arrived yesterday, and I should be getting a desktop in the next few weeks. In the future I might animate some of the desktops i've made, but as it is my laptop chokes to do as much that it already does.

Last weekend it snowed, big fluffy flakes, for most of the day. Being that it's october, it melts as soon as it hits. Still has me thinking on the winter though.

This one I did today. It was inspired from this lookout cabin trip i did. More shots from mountain biking on that mountain located here.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

But Wait- There's More!



Free desktops to fit a 1920x1080 monitor resolution, for anyone who's interested.

Changing my desktop has become routine, akin to vacuuming i suppose. Since I do this stuff for a living, making my own is the only way to go. Here are two recent desktops, and I suppose the last post of the photo from my roof falls into this same category.

I made the abstract one in illustrator, and the grass one in pshop.

It is what it is...

From the Roof


New place, similar story.

Monday, July 20, 2009

4th of July Photos


I used to come to Boston with the whole fam in my younger days for the 4th, and we'd hang out on the blanket all day waiting for the fireworks. So there was some reminiscent familiarity while walking through it all, but mostly after cruising through i was good to leave and stay away from all of it. Above is Storrow drive, closed for traffic, open to walking.


Although this makes perfect sense to advertise, too see it written out is kinda funny/odd...


The hatch shell is the hive of the nest/festivities. I ended up walking to it, and walking back subsequently after, wondering the whole time why i walked to see it in the first place. The journey was more the point of the trip, but I get anxious when I feel like human cattle, all moving at the same pace. There was a lot of interesting human activity going on that was worth photographing, but it was too busy to stop all that cattle and take photos.


Generally people find places next to the river and camp out for the day, roping off their sections and leaving one or two people there to hold down the spot while the others join the cattle in walking around. This rare section where no one was sitting was because the long stretch of porta-potties were next to this area. Who wants to watch fireworks and listen to 50+ people go to the bathroom?


But truthfully I was just killing time down there with my photo journey- my real aim was to meet up with my old college roomate Pooba and his wife Melissa. They were on a east coast bus roadtrip with the whole clan- both her and his families. They must all be very close and enjoy each others companies- how many people could swing that trip? I think the bus ride in itself is a lot to ask. So the graveyard above is in the Common, and it had always been locked in the past when I was taking classes down there, and I knew hundreds of people who were dug up when they built the subways through there had been buried in a mass grave in there, along with a lot of other wealthier denizens of old Boston. So I wasted some time here taking photos...


Eventually I met up with Pooba and Melissa, but we pretty much just went out to eat a lot and their trip was short, so no photos of all of us. Maybe next time- no, till next time....

Friday, June 26, 2009

Fresh Animations

Random Animations from ben russell on Vimeo.


Working freelance provides both money and work in lumps at a time. On the flipside, there's the times, that also come in lumps, where you don't work, and money doesn't come in for awhile. That's how it goes, I suppose.

What do I do with myself during these off times? Well, I've found that some people use their time to get their business cards in order to better market themselves to potential job opportunities. I have no such interest in doing that kind of stuff, so I read tutorials online, and make animations, to get better at what I do...

Here's a random assortment of animations I've made in the last few weeks. Some were from tutorials, and there's a few random things I did for work in there- some roto jobs I did- the one at the end was a back to the future knock-off for some internal video, and the other is a car hitting a wall, but the walls/floor were the incorrect color.

I'll post more of these as they come up. Maybe eventually I can post some of the larger projects I've done, when they actually go public....

Monday, June 22, 2009

Happy Fathers Day


It was nice to be around yesterday for Fathers Day, first time I have been in years...
Above is the card I gave to him, made it the morning before. Sometimes we work best under pressure...

Saturday, June 06, 2009

Roadtrip Animation- Mass to Montana 2005

Roadtrip 2005- Mass to Montana from ben russell on Vimeo.


Like a bird, I suppose, I used to seasonally migrate between summers out east in Mass and NYC to live out in Montana in the winter times. The drive used to be an endurance test, and generally I enjoyed them for the most part. I would go alone, drive straight from Mass to Chicago, which was around 24 hours, then hang out there for a few days. Then I'd go straight from Chicago to Montana, which is also around 24 hours. During the voyage, I would sleep in the back of my car at rest stops when I needed a couple hours of rest, but never in motels, because I knew I wouldn't sleep long anyways.

Those trips used to give me a chance to reconnect with old friends across the country twice a year, which was something I really enjoyed about them. Around here you can read my original post(s) about the trip.

The technique I used in animating these photos is the same one I used in the Morphing Hands video, using the pixel motion frame blending technique in after effects.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Mr. Lee comes for a Visit


The last time I'd seen Mr. Lee was in Montana two years ago. He flew into Boston, a place he'd never been before, and we made the usual New England Tour. This is him on the cliff walk in Newport, RI.

Here's Mr. Lee again, taking a photo of a duck I think, or maybe it was a Canadian Geese?

We walked by the Museum of Fine Arts, but didn't stop in, because there's a really cool museum a little further down, that was unfortunately closed that day. Here is a massive baby head that's out front.

This is the two of us down in Newport. Lee was taking a photo of some thing, probably a boat, and I'm imitating his camera face. Everybody puts out their camera face when taking photos, I'm trying to bring attention to that with this photo.

The Barking Crab is such a cool name, I really wanted Lee to get a piece of memorabilia from this establishment, but he wasn't budging. Seafood really became the item of choice for consumption on Lee's trip, and I'm good with not eating any of it for awhile now that he's gone.

Two more shots of Newport here, one is of a mansion on the cliff walk, and the other is some random one that says "Lobsta & Crabs". I couldn't pass it up.

The Celtics were playing the night we got back from Newport, and while we were discussing which restaurant we wanted to go to to watch the game, we decided to just take a stroll down to the Bank North Garden and see if we could get tickets. The whole time we were doubtful, but there was still seats available. So the two of us got to sit with some seriously die hard Boston fans (who probably weren't even paying attention to basketball a few years ago) and eat some cheese dogs+drink some beers way above watching some NBA finals Bball. Too bad they lost the series, but not that game!



I unfortunately didn't get any pics from when the nyc crew came through at the beginning of Lee's trip, however I don't think photos or words could summarize that whole experience....

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Search Bar



"Search Bar: Imagine a not-too-distant future, where a person’s movements can be accessed via a search bar, and illustrated with current public mapping technologies."

This was a project I recently finished for my studies in digital media class. I was interested in topics surrounding surveillance.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

East Coast Snowboarding


It pales in comparison regarding number of days on the hill, but I've had a pretty good winter this year, taking my new location into account. Yesterday was my fifth day out this season, and all of the days have been fun ones out there. It's been a great mix of fun people to ride with and decent mountains. Nothing has compared to Big Sky in size or pow days, but I've had some fresh snow days out east here, along with some great warm sunny ones too.
Work has been busy. Every day I've been creating new projects at work that will be used either internally in the company or will get used on television at some point. Skills have been increasing, so work has stayed challenging + exciting.

These two photos are from a few weeks ago up at Jay Peak with a two co-workers and my lil cousin. I'd love to ride Jay on a pow day because they have a lot of tree runs, but this day out was pretty fun, aside from the packed bus ride up there.

Sometime in the not-too-distant future I'll post up another video- maybe something combining a few different small pieces I've been doing at home, and maybe even a few things I've done at work with that.

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Camera Flies Around Lone Peak


Big Sky- Camera Fly Around from ben russell on Vimeo.
This is the first installment of my work in computer animation for a class I'm taking right now. I built Lone Peak in Maya, then added the sky and intro titles at home in After Effects. Later versions of this project will include more of the mountains in the area.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Morphing Hands


Morphing Hands from ben russell on Vimeo.

Late last night I was looking around online and came across this site and liked some of the hand gesture illustrations. I liked not only the gestures but the textures, and how they looked quickly drawn. Then I remembered this tutorial and wanted to see how fast I could complete this, sorta like a challenge for myself. Here's the results from my Morphing Hands project. After I morphed them, I looped it 6 times so it runs 12 seconds long, and also threw a starglow effect on it, but not too much...

Monday, February 23, 2009

Zero Gravity Terrain Park Video- Snippet


Zero Gravity Terrain Park- Snippet from ben russell on Vimeo.
Earlier this past summer I posted an edit with some footage from the Zero Gravity Terrain Park at Moonlight Basin, in Big Sky Montana. Since I've been pushing my knowledge of motion graphics and I still had all that footage, I decided to contact the parks designer and re-use some of that footage to create...well...something like this.

This is just the end snippet, like 10 seconds long, but it's along the lines of what I'm doing for the video.

Mapping Project for Studies in Digital Media


















Studies in Digital Media is a class I'm taking this semester, and the group assignment is one utilizing google maps, where we pick an aspect of city life to map and then all compile the results. Our project is for public art, and on the map we're going to differentiate between active/passive sites where activity/participation is occurring with the sites.

One thing I realized while walking around taking these photos this morning is that summer may be a better time to really diagnose these sites as they are, since the winter/spring in which we're in may be a more dormant time for catching people interacting with these pieces.

Some are definitely corporate by nature/location, and others seem more forgotten about. That's the aspect of this project I'm really interested in- forgotten public arts that have awkward placement, or just seem to have been forgotten about. There are a lot of murals I can think of around the vicinity that are such that, but traveling to them requires a vehicle, so I hope to get those in before Thursday nights class.

After I add these into our google map I'll post an edit that links to the project.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Umbrellas In The Snow


Transplanting from a mountain/resort town culture to an urban one has dealt a lot of curiosities my way this winter, especially in regards to snow. Big Sky Montana, to my knowledge, has never seen the likes of a city-goer using an umbrella as if it would assist in any way during a snow storm, yet around Boston this is a fairly common occurrence.

In searching for an appropriate image for this post, I also realized that other cities have this phenomenon occur as well, and even the new york times (where i found this image actually) wrote an article about this here.

Last night an umbrella would have served a solid purpose, however, since it was more of an ice-rain than anything else, and all the sidewalks were streams with frozen underbelly's. Treacherous, soaked walking was something similar to hiking in the spring time out in Montana...

More as things develop...

Saturday, January 10, 2009

The Check is in the Mail!

There's been a lot of downtime, with the holiday season going on. A lot of waiting for emails, waiting for phone calls, and waiting at the mailbox. This downtime has been increasingly productive, as I just now fixed the bathroom door so it won't creep shut slowly all the time. Other various things I'm occupied with also, like watching the snow fall, and the people digging their cars out.

It's been a pretty low-key holiday season in these parts. Not what I'm used too...