From an Iconic Movie

It felt time to play a Four Icon Challenge assignment in ds106. it’s always hard to know if you make these too challenging or too easy, I am thinking this one is the latter.

My approach, as I usually cannot recall movies all that well, is to watch some YouTube clips to remind me of key scenes. I scribble down icon ideas in a text file, and run some image searches for icons/comics, even real photos with clean backgrounds that might work.

Not being up to being as meticulous as Michael B Smith, after sizing the images to a similar vertical scale in PhotoShop, applied the Smudge Stick effect to each one for a more graphic design:

I am still not quite as sneaky clever as Martha was in the challenge.

What say ye?

four icon challenge(up up away)

 

 

 

 

4 Icon Challenge – They Said I Led a Dull Life

North By Northwest

I still enjoy making my own icons for this assignment using the live trace tool in Illustrator. I made a quick tutorial of how I do this using the Dr. Oblivion image as my example to convert a bitmap to vectors.

And please guess away, the biplane should be the tell tale icon for most!

Four Icon Challenge – Fantastic Voyage

All icons either Public Domain or CC by Attribution from the Noun Project (http://thenounproject.com/)

“Reduce a movie, story, or event into it’s basic elements, then take those visuals and reduce them further to simple icons.”

Those aren’t my words, but rather the instructions from the Four Icon Challenge ds106 assignment. Since this coming semester’s ds106 theme is apparently that of a “fantastical voyage” (the opening post for the course is “journey to the center of the internet”), I thought it might be appropriate to pay homage to the 1966 Academy Award winning film, Fantastic Voyage.

For those of you who may be new readers of my blog, I am an open participant in the most excellent storytelling course, DS106. A completely open, collaborative effort by a growing number of universities, DS106 (digital storytelling 106) is an exploration of media, technology, and story telling in a way that challenges its participants to create, remix, and manipulate images, sound, and video to tell a narrative. Besides being witness to stupefyingly great digital art that assaults my education-focused thoughts with the kind of creativity and deviance that attracted me to teaching in the first place, ds106 is a great way for anyone, including teachers, to explore and experiment with all sorts of free tools and software that can aide in the creation of digital artifacts for learning.

For example, I created the image above using Adobe Illustrator, a terribly complex and robust piece of software that no elementary-trained educator in their right mind would ever really need or want to use. However, thanks to the extremely helpful ds106 community, I was able to focus on just some very basic tools within the program, use some of the great free icons from The Noun Project, and assemble this piece of digital art. Sure, I don’t understand how to create vector-based artwork (for which the tool is intended), but I at least now know how to manipulate paths, fill colors, and arrange layers to remix images for educational uses.

Even IF you don’t want to take the plunge and start exploring a professional grade graphic suite, you could always just use a word processor or a simple paint program to have students assemble their own “four icon assignment”. Using the free icons from The Noun Project, have them build a representation of the learning goals for a particular unit, or summarize the main ideas of a reading passage. You could even use the visual element as a springboard for writing, reflection, or compare and contrast all of the students imagery to see if the class can pick up on common important elements of a story.

At the very least, you owe it to yourself to check out what some of the other people have been doing with this visual assignment for ds106, and see if you can’t challenge yourself to create a four icon image of your typical day at school and share.

4 Icon Cookie Challenge….the bava abides

Image credit: jennifer könig

I just happened to stumble upon some images from the recent Lebowskifest cast reunion (the film was made over 13 years ago!!!). I’m an unabashed fan, so I got sucked down the rabbit hole. The images led me to the Lebowskifest site which led me to the livestream archive of the reunion, which is awesome. John Goodman seems like he is a psycho, and Julianne Moore actually got pregnant midway through the filming and refers to her son in the following video as the little Lebowski—I love that! And what’s even more awesome about the video is that the cast is just goofing on the film and having fun with the quotes that every fan goofs on amongst themselves. Surreal.

I then searched on and ran across this image by Mauzygirl in the Big Lebowski Flickr group/pool that features an amazingly ornate batch of Lebowski cookies she made. They are amazing, so I got the idea of doing a 4 icon challenge ds106 assignment—but this time based on cookie designs. How cool would it be to have students bake these icons for this assignment?

Another four icons

Yeah, I know the current SOB iteration of DS106 covered design/visual a few weeks ago, but I had this idea for another 4 icon challenge tonight and decided to throw it together.

Four Icon Challenge – Deliverance

John Boorman’s survivalist film Deliverance rendered in four icons.Four Icon Challenge – Deliverance

Visual Assignment: Four Icon Challenge

Assignment: Reduce a movie, story, or event into it’s basic elements, then take those visuals and reduce them further to simple icons.

four_icon_sherlockholmes

A Study In Pink

Explanation, etc., to come in the morning.

Visual Assignments #4

The Four Icon Challenge -

While sorting through some of the movies I had on my comp, I landed on For Love of the Game, in which a baseball pitcher who doesn’t want to admit to himself that his career is coming to an end has one last chance to showcase his talent on the field and keep the woman he loves from leaving. The baseball of course represents the game he plays and loves and has spent his whole life obsessing over. The heart also can be tied in with the game, Jane who he loves and almost loses, and the team he has stayed with his whole (long) professional career. In opposite corners there is the conflicting old man and young man, age is something that Billy (the pitcher) had to deal with throughout the movie with fans yelling at him for not retiring yet and new, young hotshots coming into the game that could possibly force him out. Through pitching he also has developed some sort of shoulder injury that has worsened with age and appears to just be getting worse, another reason to close out his career as a pitcher soon. The different age pics can also represent Billy accepting the inevitable changes that are about to occur in his life, finally moving on and finding the strength he needs to let go.

Four Icon Challenge – Videodrome


VIDEODROME

In honor of Dr. O’blivion so graciously teaching our course, I decided to do a four icon challenge based on his breakout (and only) role in Videodrome.

*SPOILERS IF YOU HAVEN’T SEEN THE MOVIE*

The handcuffs represent the material broadcasted in Videodrome (oh, you know what I’m talking about). The television is clearly, well, because half of the movie is staring at a television, and because it is the driving force in the plot. The gun represents the fate of the main character Max Renn. Finally, the videotape, because that’s how O’Blivion communicates throughout the movie. I had considered putting the gun after the tape, however, I felt that in the nature of this course it would be more appropriate to highlight the Doctor’s role by putting it at the end.

This was fun to think about! I had lots of movie ideas (including lost in translation and eternal sunshine.. to name a few).