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Monday, 19. April 2010

Voodoo Toys

Last weekend I attended a workshop called Vodoo Toys which was meant as an introduction to circuit bending. According to Wikipedia on Circuit bending, it’s

the creative short-circuiting of electronic devices such as low voltage, battery-powered guitar effects, children's toys and small digital synthesizers to create new musical or visual instruments and sound generators.

(Wikipedia’s circuit bending article was last modified on 20 February 2010 at 13:33 when I wrote this.)

Our tutor Stan Pete uses bent toys in live concerts and taught us how to elicit weird noises from electronic children’s toys ourselves. I myself don’t want to do live alien music, but I’m always trying to find new and intresting ingredients for animation. And because sound is as much important as the visuals, I thought it would be great to learn how to trigger weird melodies and sound effects like these.
The pictures below will give you some insights:

Open Mystery Box.

Search for Connections.

Found Possibilities. The workflow is always similar: open your toy or device, find connections evoking sounds, soldering them together and then do some case modelling.


I just did simple modifications since I’m a kind of newbie to electronic arts. I added

This is what my voodoo toy can do (approx. 11MB):

Get the Flash Player to see this player.

Sorry for my bad pronounciation and sometimes missing vocabulary, I’m simply not used to talk to my camera in English...

Of course you could do far more complex circuit bending if you’d have more complex devices than I have here... But for a quick start it was a nice result I think...

This is what others do with their bent toys:

If you want to read more about circuit bending, follow these links:


Important note:

Please be careful if you want to try it yourself. You’re dealing with electricity here and this may cause serious injuries. Circuit benders normally only use battery driven devices since they only have low voltage connections.

Saturday, 3. October 2009

The Necktie

The Necktie is a 12 minute animated short directed by Jean-Francois Levesque. It's produced by the National Film Board of Canada (who also produced one of my all-time favourites, Madame Tutli-Putli) and I'm glad that my friend Jan-Christoph suggested it to me today...

It will be online for one week only, so make sure you'd have seen it at plus7.arte.tv up to next Friday's night. It's a lovely piece of animation and earned its awards well. – Jean-Francois Levesque combines different animation techniques here which is something I enjoy so much. It's also a great example of how important a good sound design is, especially in animation where everything is quiet in the very beginning.

Most of it is traditional puppet animation inspired by the work of Nick Park and Tim Burton, he describes his influences. The main character was animated in stopmotion technique, his colleagues came to life by drawn animation and finally software was employed to do the compositing.

The film is about a man who lives his dull life which mainly consits of work at a weird company called Life Inc. One day he accidentally finds out where the career ladder or, more precisely, the career elevator really is leading to. It's a small parable about the importance of art in our life.

That interview below I found on the NFB website where he describes the whole process. So for all of you who might be late to watch the video in time I embed it here:

Oh, and make sure you'd check out all the details at the NFB's Necktie website, they have some stills and production photos there. Suprise: I myself like the paper look and feel puppets most...

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