Another way to show animation in a book is by printing the stills on a series of pages and then rapidly flipping through them, as in what are called flip-books. These don’t need to be the main content of a book, however; you can do small animations just near the corners or edges of the pages. Even something so simple as watching a sigil be drawn is cool to experience and invokes a sense of mystery as it appears to manifest by an invisible instrument or agent.
4 Replies to “Interactive Media for Occult Book Makers”
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Hi HyperRitual,
excellent presentation so far. I think that the figure from Matthew Reinhart & Robert Sabuda’s Encyclopaedia Mythologica volume, Dragons & Monsters, is the Medusa and not the Sphinx. I’m not 100% certain about this, but I can deduct it from her snakey hair.
Keep up with the great work,
Plethon.
Hi, Nick. Thanks for taking time to check out my work. Look at the lower-right corner of the book; that is the transition I am referring to in the speech/text. :-)
Right, I get it now, thank you for pointing it out. I have finished watching the slide show and I find it brilliant. It does motivate to go out and start doing, creating, interacting… Please produce more work like this, we’re so thirsty for this kind of quality.
Cheers, man!