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Stanley And Stella Breaking The Ice Poster
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Custom (19.00" x 25.00")
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Stanley And Stella Breaking The Ice Poster
“The SIGGRAPH '87 film show featured a different kind of computer graphics production: "Stanley and Stella in Breaking the Ice," a collaboration between the Symbolics Graphics Division and Whitney/Demos Productions. This two-minute film introduced behavioral animation, a new system of animation in which the group characters' behavior and interrelationships are modeled, as well as showcasing new research in character animation. The film tells the story of two worlds divided by an ice barrier, one a world of birds, the other a world of fish, and develops a relationship between two of these characters. The film was created, animated and rendered using Symbolics 3600-series workstations at sites in Westwood CA, Chatsworth CA, and Cambridge MA.
The flocks of birds and schools of fish in the film—called "the first computer-generated extras" by producer Michael Wahrman—are controlled by a system for behavioral animation that allows the flocks and schools to be animated as a whole. The members of the flocks and schools are given behaviors, goals, and constraints; each individual's action is determined from these. Research behind this animation was done by Craig Reynolds and will be presented at this year's SIGGRAPH Technical Program. By putting the responsibility for detailed decision-making on the animated character rather than the animator, behavioral animation made it easier to populate the screen with many characters since it was not necessary to explicitly specify the path of each. The film includes scenes in which as many as 160 birds and fish were involved, each character "ad-libbing" its path around obstacles and neighboring flockmates while staying close to the flock. In addition, the animator can provide stage directions for the flock, that is, "suggestions" that the flock will follow approximately, but that will be modified by interaction with their other behaviors.
The film also demonstrates new techniques for organization and the effective production of character animation. The subtle character animation used to give the stars, Stanley and Stella, the nuances of expression was developed by Philippe Bergeron of Whitney/Demos Productions (co-director and character animator of the "Tony de Peltrie" animated film in 1985). These techniques were developed on top of the Symbolics S-Dynamics animation system, and allow for fine control of expression and detail.
The rendering of "Breaking the Ice" was carried out at three Symbolics locations, one on the east coast and two on the west. Machines for the project were contributed from every portion of Symbolics: manufacturing, training, marketing, software products, software support, VLSI and other architecture groups, as well as the Graphics Division itself. Many of these machines were only used overnight when their normal user was home asleep; other machines were dedicated full-time to the project. Using experimental software written by Joseph Goldstone of the Graphics Division, with assistance from Charles Hornig and others in Cambridge, object and script definitions were shipped across the network to each rendering location, at which point a controlling machine for that location divided the shot up on a frame-by-frame basis and parceled it out to the other local machines for actual rendering. Completed frames were shipped back (by network or magnetic tape) to Westwood for recording on 1" videotape. The controlling machine centralized handling of frame storage, error recovery, and relative shot priority (when multiple scenes were rendering at a given site). Shots in progress across the country were often recorded on video tape while they were in the process of being rendered to verify their correctness.
The way in which color, visual texture, and surface irregularities were rendered demonstrated several features new to Symbolics' rendering system. The film demonstrates not only texture and opacity mapping, which predate this project, but also bump mapping, in which uneven surfaces can be described for 3D objects, and reflectance mapping, whereby shiny objects reflect their surroundings. This was a crucial element in effects such as the surface of the ice barrier and the gleams from Stanley's polished exterior.
The film's innovative technical achievements are complemented by its progressive look overall, with art direction being provided by L.A.'s Hitman of Design. The Hitman team focused on integrating all the features of the Symbolics Animation System into a dynamic visual whole. Symbolics S-Paint and S-Geometry software proved especially well-suited for producing the complex character modeling and the variety of textural effects called for.
"Breaking the Ice" breaks new ground in many ways. It demonstrates new technology in behavioral and character animation, exercises distributed networked rendering, establishes the relationship between Symbolics and Whitney/Demos, and exercises the Symbolics animation system in a large scale project. We are happy to be a part of the SIGGRAPH 1987 Film and Video Show and we hope you will enjoy viewing "Breaking the Ice" as much as we enjoyed creating it.”
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5 out of 5 stars rating
By Sharon S.July 31, 2025 • Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 36.00" x 25.10", Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
I was so amazed at how this all turned out. Everyone who attended the funeral was in awe of how beautiful it was made.
And I owe it all to Zazzle. I wouldn’t have done it better myself not to mention I wouldnt have time to do it.
The great part of it all was they had templates that was catered to my needs and that I could use it in ways I wanted to use to resize it my way. It took some time but I was happy it turned out great. I did 100 photos, 89, 66 photos (I think) lol templates.
The only suggestion is that the templates, before sending through would tell you of errors like; saying please revise or resize it again for any photos that is not perfectly well sitting or not show it’s cutting off some of them and where it tells you there’s duplicates.
Staring, placing and resizing all 100 + pictures into the template can be tiresome and overwhelming and it makes my eyes blurred that I can’t tell if they’re cutting off or overlapping or duplicates.
Overall I am very pleased and will be using Zazzle again should the need arises.
Thank you Zazzle.
Altogether I’ve done 3 collages 1 profile picture and couple pictures with 1 frame and yet this is my first time ordering as a 1 time customer.
Prices were very reasonable and accommodating to my finances.
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5 out of 5 stars rating
By Peyton C.November 8, 2023 • Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 8.00" x 10.00", Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
Zazzle Reviewer Program
The sign was beautiful and matched our theme. The paper was good quality. Excellent printing!!
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Marianne O.November 26, 2021 • Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 12.00" x 12.00", Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
Creator Review
Fun bright artwork that really captures the mood I’m going for! Pop art with cyberpunk energy. A little sweet but also spicy. This art is the perfect size and vibe for our art gallery wall. The printing looks great, high quality with vibrant colors! I went with the semi-gloss finish, which adds a little extra shine and thickness to the print making it excellent for high-traffic areas like the staircase wall.
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Product ID: 256092279607221039
Created on: 7/21/2023, 11:01 AM
Rating: G
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