Friday, November 07, 2008

Kinetic Typography

I saw a while ago in tv a clip of William Wallace's speach in Braveheart done in words, it wasn't the first time I see this kind of method, but it certainly caught my attention and interest, so I searched for more videos and found out that this type of art has a name.. Kinetic Typography.



"Kinetic typography refers to the art and technique of expression with animated text. Similar to the study of traditional typography of designing static typographic forms, kinetic typography focuses on understanding the effect time has on the expression of text. Kinetic typography has demonstrated the ability to add significant emotive content and appeal to expressive text, allowing some of the qualities normally found in film and the spoken word to be added to static text. Kinetic type has been widely and successfully used in film as well as in television and computer-based advertising. Perceptual psychology research on attention, reading performance, and comprehension has indicated that time-based presentation of text can be used effectively to capture and manipulate a viewer’s attention and in some cases improve overall reading performance."

I'm intregued to learn it, but in the mean while watch these


















5 comments:

nanonano said...

شنو يعني؟!؟

ويع..ويع..حدي غبيه بهالأشياء

Anonymous said...

V 4 Vendetta

EXzombie said...

نانو

صح النوم

شوفي اخر فيديو يشرح لج شنو اهو بالضبط و فلم الطفل و شوفي شنو المجالات الي فتحت لتطبيقها

بالنسبة لي اعتبره مجال مؤثر و فريد، و متطلب بعد

Frankom,

yep, and don't forget the "Dicks, Pussies, and Assholes" too..

cool stuff

بومريوم said...

most of it done using adobe after effect

http://www.adobe.com/products/aftereffects/?promoid=BPDDW

powerful tool,and easy to use

Q80-ChillGirl said...

Thank you for letting me know what its called :p I think its amazing

http://chilloutkuwait.blogspot.com/2008/06/remember-remember.html

go for it!

when i read/ hear anything done in this Kinetic Typography i immediately feel impressed! of the literal ability the writer holds :)