Hello and welcome to my first blog post. In this blog, I
 will be discussing the process for some of my projects. 
                
                During the Fall semester of 2019, I was in a course 
called Motion Graphics. In it, we used the video editing program
                Adobe After Effects. Our final project was an open ended
 video assignment, aiming for between 1-3 minutes. After some
                brainstorming, I decided to make my project about the 
first few scenes of one of my absolute favorite games, The Legend of Zelda:
                Ocarina of Time. I soon came upon a stopping point for this project's scope, to stop the story when Link first leaves the Kokiri
                forest.
                
                My initial idea was to have it look like an old NES or 
SNES game cinematics, looking specifically at Ninja Gaiden
                (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtOxZiizL4E).
 Though, as I began
                working on it, this idea changed and I realized I 
couldn't quite recreate these cinematics as I wanted. I still integrated
 some of the
                ideology with the the sizing of the text box and the 
sizing of the image. I also enjoyed the idea that in NES cinematics, 
simple
                2-frame animations are the norm.
I reread the first view scenes in the LoZ: OoT manga ( https://www.viz.com/read/manga/legend-of-zelda-volume-1/product/1890) and watched gameplay footage of the first scenes in the game itself (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FX8YkcOeOfQ), up to when Link leaves the forest. I noted the pivotal, plot-moving scenes - dreaming of Zelda, fighting Gohma, receiving the Kokiri Emerald, hearing the origin of the universe, etc. I identified which ones I wanted to use as reference, and began sketching. The research probably took between 1-2 hours. The sketches took maybe 5 hours all together, most of which I made fairly detailed to prepare for scanning. I had a little story boarding experience from a previous assignment in my game design course that helped.
I've included some of my sketches below.
                Afterwards, I digitally traced my images, which took 
some time - maybe an hour for each of the more detailed ones.
                I can include those here in the future. I can also show 
how the editing looks in Adobe After Effects.
                
                Once I finish the animations I have planned, I'd plan to
 add sounds. Beyond that, one thing I'm considering is adding more of a
                background to each slide.
                
                To be continued...
Video Animation (update #2)