Taking my ideas seriously

October 10th, 2011

This past week I began my journey into the world of web development as a student at Code Academy. I made the decision to leave my animation job to come here for a number of reasons, the big one being that I want to be able to make my web app ideas a reality. For a while now, I’ve had web app/business ideas floating around in my head without any knowledge of how to build any of them. In the past, I tried not to focus too much on these ideas, believing that I was just distracting myself from more important things like keeping a stable job, developing my skills as an animator, being a responsible father and husband. I regarded these web app/business ideas as unrealistic fantasies that I should avoid wasting my time on.

But then something changed. The more I tried to stop thinking about these ideas, the more they tormented me. When I found out about Code Academy, it finally clicked. I had to learn how to build these things, if for no other reason than to get them out of my head. I had to start taking these ideas seriously.

After my first week of class, the thing I’m most excited about is being surrounded by a group of people who already take their ideas seriously, who are not reluctant to share their enthusiasm about their ideas with others for fear of being judged as naive dreamers. I’m not quite there yet. I still have some of that fear. But I can tell already that it’s fading.

Atticus is One Year Old!

March 9th, 2011

Happy Birthday

Squigglevision After Effects Preset (CS5)

December 16th, 2010


I created this animation preset for After Effects CS5 to mimic the Squigglevision look. It works pretty well on hand drawn images. You can apply it to anything though. It’s a pretty simple concoction. I just applied a wiggle and posterize time expression to the offset of the Turbulent Displace effect. I included sliders that allow you to control the intensity of the wiggle and the frame rate. You can also play around with the other parameters in the Turbulent Displace effect to refine the look even more.

If there’s interest, I could create a CS4 version also.

Click here to download for CS5

UPDATE! The CS4 version is now available (finally).

Click here to download for CS4

Graduation!

June 7th, 2010


I graduated! Yessireebob. Now I’m off to that “real world” I keep hearing about, which means that I am now open for business. Need an animator and/or illustrator in the Chicago area? Drop me a line: dan@danallison.org

Love & Theft

May 11th, 2010

I thoroughly enjoyed this trippy, hypnotic short film. It’s a good animation history lesson, too.

The Father

April 6th, 2010

I really enjoyed this short from Sticky Monster Lab. It’s a sad story, but a resonant one (for me at least, as both a father and a son). It gets better with repeated viewings.

The Father from fla on Vimeo.

Atticus James Allison

March 14th, 2010

My son, Atticus James Allison, was born on Friday, March 5, 2010, at 10:13am.
Atticus James Allison

Sol Design

October 27th, 2009

Yesterday, I and my fellow animation/vfx students at Flashpoint got to take a tour of Sol Design, which is a design and effects studio in downtown Chicago. You’ve probably seen a lot of the commercials they’ve done. I recommend checking out their “before and after” reel, which is on the “works” section of their website. It shows their visual effects process, basically all the steps involved in going from raw footage to finished product. It’s pretty amazing.

The tour lasted about four hours. We got to talk to a multitude of employees who showed us what they were working on and answered all our questions. Overall, it was pretty inspiring to me to get to see the whole process and get a better understanding of how the commercials I see on TV get made, and it motivated me to work a little harder at school so I’ll be more up to snuff for employers like Sol Design by the time I graduate.

Story, Poem, and Illustrations in School Paper

October 27th, 2009

The most recent issue of my school’s school paper features a short story, a poem, and three illustrations by yours truly. You can check it out here, or you can go directly to the story, the poem, or the illustrations.

Today’s Edward Tufte Seminar

October 20th, 2009

Today I attended a one-day course titled “Presenting Data and Information” taught by Edward Tufte in Chicago, which I signed up for on somewhat of a whim a month or two ago. Though the topic of the seminar wasn’t directly related to my field, per se, I thought it was relevant enough to my work as an animator and illustrator to warrant attending. I am, after all, a creator of graphics. And even if it had no relevance whatsoever, I still find Tufte’s work intriguing. So that alone was reason enough to go.

I enjoyed the course greatly. Topics covered included interface design, integration of graphics with text, the importance of resolution, what makes a graphic engaging and communicative vs boring or confusing or irrelevant, and why PowerPoint is the most god-awful way to present information ever. A lot of time was dedicated to that last point. Too much time, in fact. I guess it was justifiable considering that the audience consisted mostly of business types who probably give PowerPoint presentations all the time. I, however, wanted to hear more about the graphics.

Overall, I would say that my biggest take-away from the seminar can be summed up in a quote that Tufte said toward the beginning of the day,

There is no such thing as information overload, only failure of design.