Well, I have quite a long story.
I actually discovered brickfilming all by myself. My first digital camera could flip through pictures really fast, and I found that if I took a picture of something, moved it, and took another picture, it would look like the object moved. Then, I had the idea of trying to make moving lego guys with the same technique. I started making tons and tons of animation, so much so that my parents got me my own SD card (they weren't cheap back then) so that I wouldn't have all these random little animations cluttering up the card. Then, a few years later, when youtube was just starting to get popular, I found that there were several other people who did the same thing, which really surprised me because I thought it was just a weird thing that only I did. It wasn't until a year or so after that that I took my best piece of animation and figured out how to put the pictures into windows movie maker and put it on a dvd. THEN, a year or so after THAT, I got a youtube account and uploaded a newer brickfilm that I had just finished making. Finally, I uploaded that first one that I had made so long ago.
Youtube |
Twitter"Animation is about creating the illusion of life. And you can't create it if you don't have one." - Brad Bird