Wednesday, April 25, 2012

...Hush

This is the first "real" blog post that I remember making in a long while. This project had a lot of uniqueness to it. It wasn't your typical get in, get done kind of thing. It was broken up with level two students teaching the class a technique in photoshop. I wasn't spending every day for 45 minutes working on the same thing...I could listen and finish the needed assignment the level two student would give me, and I could pull out this project, as well. My mind could see a lot more "little" things because of it being broken up -- and I caught a lot of different small detail things that I'd like to change or implement.

However, this project was NOT anything fun at first. We were to make a horror movie poster. I hate horror movies. I hate being in that state of mind, of that fast paced, creeper mind. It makes everything inside me jump, and get defensive, even in reality. I don't like thinking someone behind me has a knife at my neck, or that someone's been following me like the grim reaper...or in this case, there's a poor little kid cursed and here to take revenge.

So thinking like this was difficult at first. But I got over it. I had to. I had a lot of encouragement from my teacher, and then things started flowing better. It felt great to get something done and not know where this project was going. It was ever changing, and I liked that. "Like a river," as someone would say.

Other than getting out of a rut, there were few complications, but the ones I faced were major. For example, I had to make some changes in the composition, when I already thought the poster was "completed. As well as that, there was some layering issues that needed to be fixed, and there was a scare that I lost the .PSD file and only had a .PNG file of the zombie. I believe I could have made this more "poster" like, but this is one of my weak spots. I expect the next project I will integrate and use more different, original styled fonts. 

This project really helped me answer a lot of "big picture" questions. Not exactly having to do with 'art' specifically, but creativity. You can start something, but you can't have a solid concrete answer or end. You have to be open to change. But most importantly, you have to ENJOY the change -- if it's not enjoyable, then it's not worth it. It's the change that excites, thrills, and inspires the creative people, the poets, musicians, etc. I never thought that a horror-movie poster would reveal all this. But I'm grateful. 

2 comments:

  1. Ross! This looks so creepy, but in a good way. It really looks like a horror movie cover. I think its really neat that the top picture is mostly blacked out, so I can see something, but I'm not sure what, exactly. It makes me want to watch the movie to find out, which is saying something because I don't like horror movies either! But it does look really good, great job Ross!

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  2. This looks really creepy! I liked how you stacked the layers, you made it look really nice. It would have been even better if you would have used a creepy font from dafont though.

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