Welcome to my channel where I share my love and passion for art. I have worked as a professional artist for over 35 years creating works in a variety of media. I am also a licensed art educator who loves to share the process of creation with you. I hope you find my channel informational and entertaining.
Great Timelapse. Also PS its funny, I just recently randomly stumbled upon your channel and I went to DSA, graduated 2016 piano major. I have a ham repeater at the tower site above and was looking up Milner Mtn when we were initially heading up there and randomly found your trail cam videos and just realized I pass by your house, kind of a crazy coincidence. I met your husband when I had to snowshoe all the way up one year to get up there from the very bottom of the hill. My mom says hi by the way, Carol fennell she’s an artist and knows you.
Well that is a small world! I remember when you snow shoed up the mountain, that was quite a feat. I hope my husband was polite, he gets cranky at the workers that use our driveway instead of the tower road. You should say hi next time you are up here. The trail cams show the road up to the towers where all the wildlife goes up and down including bears and mountain lions!
Thank you for making these tutorials. I've been wanting to learn some video-making basics and I always feel so overwhelmed by any video editing program I open. This really helps to get started.
Great tips. For a cheap 'n' dirty mic solution that you may already have lying around if you have an iPad/iPhone, I've found that the wired headset (not Airpods) does a really good job of picking up vocals and even music to a certain extent. Recording into the Voice Memos app usually does a decent job with the volume level, too. Thanks for all your tutorials!
This is great. I've been doing stop motion on and off for years just with a camera and video software to put them in order. The onion skin features seems like a real help. Wish I had found this 3 years ago.
This is nice! I use thread too. I've tried the curled wire method which is good but too fiddly. I make a joint that you don't see. I push the needle through two small squares of Bristol board - strong, smooth paper - one square on top of the other. Then I use a small piece of double sided tape, one on each on the outer faces to stick the thread. So then you have two sticky outer faces, two faces of smooth paper that rotate against each other and the small bit of thread holding the joint together. The thread can be long enough so that you can allow for a little bit of stretch and squeeze for more dynamic movement.