Saturday, September 2, 2017

Our alien puppet

Here's my very first puppet. Inspired by a cat toy the kids found, he has developed into a full grown character. The small one is a rod puppet for interacting with the actors (actual size), and the big one is a hand puppet for close ups. He can move his mouth and open and close his eyes.

Painting our droid

We're priming the droid body and head for our bb style droid for painting

It's a rod style puppet, like BB-8 was for The Force Awakens. Lucy will be the puppeteer.

New short film announcement!


This fall we're starting to shoot a short film with the kids and their friends. It's a learning experience for all of us, particularly since we're going to do all of the various parts ourselves. I know this isn't usual -- the common wisdom is to specialize and bring a team together for a better end product. Someday we will do that. But for now we're learning what our specialization is. So let's try a bit of everything, and see what we like the best!

Besides, I am the 1% of the population that doesn't enjoy specialization. For me, everything I learn reinforces and adds to other things I learn. My kids have different personalities from me, so this way they don't have to do everything.

Emmett wrote the story, in a typical three-act pattern. It's a sci-fi story set in the Star Wars galaxy. All the characters are original. His school friends will be the actors, and we will provide the final effects, editing and soundtrack.

I am not a filmmaker. I've never done anything like this before. For reference, we're following the the patterns set out by the behind-the scenes documentaries, and books like The Art of Star Wars, which describes the creative and writing process. Sometimes, however an amateur approach might bring something new - or it might stink! Who knows?

This is a practice run for learning how to write, direct and produce a movie. We've done some short stuff (1-5 minutes) telling simple stories, and we're ready for a longer production.

This blog is to record the process for us later, so we can look back and refine it, and also to share our ideas with others and get feedback as we go. Also, this way we can share teasers and ideas about the movie so you'll actually go watch it online when we release it.

Stay tuned!

Friday, June 16, 2017

Q & A: Are lightsabers safe for kids?


Today we answer one of the questions about the videos: is it safe to let the kids (even the little ones) play with lightsabers? I mean, they are one of the most dangerous weapons in the galaxy! The answer lies in how they are constructed:


If you have any questions, leave them in the comments below!

Saturday, June 10, 2017

The Kids practicing with their lightsabers

The cousins were in town for the week, so we tried out a game of "laserball."


It uses a reprogrammed training drone to "serve" the laser. It's great for training, and the kids had a ball!

Test Rig for Motion on a New Droid!

We've finally moved on from short clips and are starting a short film with an actual plot!

That means we're adding some new effects to move the story along, and one is a variation on the new BB style droid. Our test rigging is here:


Let me know what you think!

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Star Wars: Probe drone bugging Emmett



This is one of my favorites. I know "force fireball" probably isn't truly Star Wars, but was fun anyhow.

Star Wars: Force Jump training



This is Emmett learning to use "Force-Jump." He can't stick the landing.

Star Wars: Force lift



This was the second video we made. After seeing the kids really sell this effect, I knew we were on to something and had to keep making more!

Star Wars: Lightsaber practice


Since we've been learning to do these videos, Emmett's friends want to join in on the fun!

Here's a quick video we shot in an afternoon for fun.

The kids learned the basic sword choreography pretty quickly, and really loved the finished product.

For myself, I settled on my favorite way to animate the sabers using Blender. It created a nice white core with good control over the glow, and it was quick and simple to rotoscope.