Motion Graphic

Motion graphics are a type of animation. While motion graphics describes moving or animated graphic design, the animation is an umbrella term for the whole field of moving imagery, including everything from cartoons to claymation. Motion graphics focus on giving movement to graphic design elements but tend to have less of a concrete storytelling aspect than other types of animation.

light in film-low key & high key

In photography, if you want to create a certain kind of mood, one of the things that you can do is use high and low key effects. These effects are important if your intention is to be as creative as you can be and play with the atmosphere and style of your photos.

But there’s more to high and low key photography than white backgrounds and lower or higher contrast.

Understand The Basics of High Key vs. Low Key Lighting

 High key lighting was used to help improve high contrast ratios. It is important to note, however, that the concept of key lighting started in the film industry. Cameramen used the term key light whenever they referred to the main light used for a particular scene. Along with the key light, the cameramen would also use backlight and fill light to complete the lighting effect that they envisioned for the scene. Of course, nowadays, more sophisticated lighting technology is used in movie-making, so the three-light technique, while still in use today, has paved the way to more complex lighting setups.

Low-key lighting, on the other hand, produces images that are the opposite of high-key photos. The low-key technique uses a lot of darker tones, shadows, and blacks (the really deep ones). Photos are taken in low-key lighting, therefore, have very minimal amounts of mid-tones and whites.

Low Key

Images taken in low key lighting create a mysterious and dramatic mood. They can display a varying range of deep negative emotions. Of course, the over-all effect depends on the scene, the subject, and the theme being portrayed.

How to make a sound effects.

The secrets to enhancing sounds effects in your films and media are likely sitting in your very own home, and they’re called Foley Artist Tricks. 

How do I make SFX sounds? It all starts with the recording process, which can generally be broken down into two distinct categories.

Room acoustics are essential to capturing a good recording, it is important that your sound has sonic depth, width, and height. Spatial attributes such as these make all the difference between hi-fi and lo-fi recordings. Predictably, a typical room in an average sized home is going to be acoustically inferior to a larger room in a professional studio, designed with acoustics in mind.

How to make sound effects using household items
The second component of the home-recording apparatus is microphone selection, which is crucial to making foley audio “fit” with audio recorded on location. For interior scenes, most hyper-cardioid condenser mics will capture good audio. Sensitive microphones are great at picking up subtle nuances in certain sound effects.
How to make sound effects using household items

There are plenty of tried-and-tested objects and techniques that foley artists have used for decades. What are examples of sound effects? Here are some foley sound effects ideas

  • Thin sticks and rods produce excellent whoosh SFX
  • Old chairs and stools are perfect for controlled creaking, or other sounds that can’t be made easily
  • Heavy-duty staple guns can easily create gunshot sound effects
  • Large, rolled-up phone books can double for for realistic body punches
  • Twisting and snapping celery sticks makes for convincing bone breaks
  • Hitting coconuts together is virtually indistinguishable to a horse walking, and will help you be inspired regarding how do you make a footstep sound effect
  • Bacon rain: substituting the sound of frying bacon is (oddly enough) a great way to achieve pouring rain sounds
  • How to make thunder sound effect? Waving a sheet of aluminium in front of the mic will produce thunder-like sounds and altering your movements will add realistic variation to the effect, answering the age-old question of how to make the sound of thunder
  • A classic horror movie staple and (thankfully) one that does not require a stethoscope to replicate, is the heartbeat sound effect. Simply take a plastic trash can, flip it over, and push the bottom in and out. Adjust the rhythm according to your desired heartbeat speed
How to make sound effects using household items

Mix 2d and a real shot

2d drawing can create a creative effect with a real shots.

Lucas Levitan is a Brazilian artist known for his ability to turn casual pictures into hilarious works of art. In his ongoing series called “Photo Invasion” (previously here) Lucas uses other people’s Instagram photos as canvases for his own creations. He takes a picture and illustrates it with silly, funny, or weird characters, completely changing the context of the original, usually making it more fun.

Different art styles-collage art



beginning in the modernist period and continuing into the contemporary art world, the collage art form has undergone a series of changes as more and more artists opt to explore it. 

Coined by cubist artists Braque and Picasso, the term “collage” comes from the French word coller, or “to glue.” The movement itself emerged under this pair of artists, who began working with various mediums to create avant-garde assemblages around 1910.

Collages can be created from a range of materials, though most are made of paper or wood and often feature cut-and-pasted photographs, painted forms, or even 3-dimensional objects. As more and more modern artists began exploring the practice throughout the 20th century, these mediums became more varied and increasingly experimental.

Different art styles-Memphis Design


Memphis design is one example of how a movement that, in the early aughts, would’ve seemed ridiculous, but is now back in style among influencers and tastemakers. Memphis is a design movement that began in 1981. While the name might make you think that it was born in Tennesse, it got its start in Milan, Italy. Designer Ettore Sottsass founded the Memphis Group with other designers and architects. They took their name from a Bob Dylan song titled Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again which was played on repeat during their first meeting.

Memphis group’s use of clashing colors, haphazard arrangements, and brightly colored plastic laminate were previously unseen. At the time, objects were usually designed to be functional, not decorative. Memphis changed this with a more creative approach to design, where they poked fun at everyday objects by designing them in a way that was unusual.


Different art styles-pop art


Andy Warhol

Pop art is easily recognizable due to its vibrancy and unique characteristics that are present in many of the most iconic works of the movement.

Pop art emerged in reaction to consumerism, mass media, and popular culture. This movement surfaced in the 1950s and gained major momentum throughout the sixties. Pop art transitioned away from the theory and methods used in Abstract Expressionism, the leading movement that preceded it. Instead, it drew upon everyday objects and media like newspapers, comic books, magazines, and other mundane objects to produce vibrant compositions, establishing the movement as a cornerstone of contemporary art.


Yayoi Kusama

Different art style-vaporwave

Vaporwave originates from a microgenre of electronic music. Nowadays, it becomes a visual art style and an Internet meme that emerged in the early 2010s. It is defined partly by its slowed-down, chopped, and screwed samples of smooth jazz, elevator, R&B, and lounge music from the 1980s and 1990s.

Vaporwave has an undeniable visual style but pinning down what exactly that style is can be difficult. From the outside, vaporwave can look like a fever dream of electric colors, Japanese characters, 90’s nostalgia, and sandy beaches. Even those with only tangential knowledge of the genre can feel oddly drawn to the beautiful collage of imagery. Some still insist that vaporwave is entirely ironic. But musicians and artists deeply entrenched in the genre will give a different answer.

The blending of imagery isn’t random, it’s undeniably evocative of the 80s and 90s aesthetics. It embraces a washed-out low fidelity look, retro-style anime, and low poly 3D graphics long since discarded to the recycling bin of history. But underneath the sparkles and irony, much of vaporwave aesthetics feels haunted and sad. The word “vaporwave” itself comes from the word “vaporware”, software that is promised by developers only to vanish without a trace.