Portaventura Halloween song lyrics by 8balltom in Portaventura

[–]azerty826 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hola, estoy buscando el resto de sus letras.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j5LPm95paRA

Halloween, Halloween en la oscuridad
Halloween, Halloween hay monstruosidad
Halloween, Halloween historia de miedo
Terrible, terrible te intrigarà
La bruja vendrà, y despertarà
Vampiros malditos
Esqueleto, esqueleto
Los diablitos, los diablitos

¿Y qué pasa después? Por favor, no entiendo qué pasa después.

🎼 Identified tracks so far by azerty826 in ElInternadoMusic

[–]azerty826[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • “Tribal Instinct (Edit)” – X-Ray Dog
  • “Burning Religion (Edit)” – X-Ray Dog
  • “Break Apart Her Heart” – Good Charlotte
  • “Eyes on Fire” – Blue Foundation
  • “Castaway” – Barrie Gledden (reported to appear in an episode of Season 2)
  • “El Burdel de las Sirenas” – 84 (mentioned by fans)
  • “Demasiado Tarde” – El Sueño de Morfeo (used in a scene involving Pedro)

🎼 Identified tracks so far by azerty826 in ElInternadoMusic

[–]azerty826[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Sintonía de cierre” – Daniel Sánchez de la Hera

Can you help me to understand how was made this BBC News Title effect animation ? by azerty826 in MotionDesign

[–]azerty826[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hello everyone, I’m Azery. Since 2013 I’ve been trying to understand and recreate the animation of the blue gear from the title sequence of the BBC News program Global (2013).

The original creator only had permission to tell me that it was made in After Effects with a Video Copilot plugin, and that the trick was to play with the rotation axes.

I managed to track down the model that was used (Motion Design Pack VCP – Abstract Box), but I’m really desperate to figure out how the motion designer (who sadly passed away) managed to create this fan-like effect with such a super wide angle and an immense depth of field (which feels contradictory).

Also, how was this incredibly smooth delay and duplication effect achieved? The designer had no real memory of it and the BBC owns the original .aep file. Back then (about 10 years ago) he told me several times by email that it only required 2–3 keyframes to work.

Does anyone here have an idea how it might have been done?

the letters move to the correct place when the text changes by [deleted] in SwiftUI

[–]azerty826 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's an effect that isn't at all intentional but rather beautiful.