Kinetic typography

Kinetic typography—the technical name for "moving text"—is an animation technique mixing motion and text to express ideas using video animation. This text is presented over time in a manner intended to convey or evoke a particular idea or emotion.

Part of a kinetic typography video

History

With the advent of film and graphic animation, the possibility of matching text and motion emerged. Examples of animated letter-forms appeared as early as 1899 in the advertising work of George Melies.[1] Early feature films contained temporal typography, but this was largely static text, presented sequentially and subjected to cinematic transitions. It was not until the 1960s that opening titles began to feature typography that was truly kinetic. Scholars recognize the first feature film to extensively use kinetic typography as Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest (1959).[2] This film's opening title sequence—created by Saul Bass—contained animated text, featuring credits that "flew" in from off-screen, and finally faded out into the film itself. A similar technique was also employed by Bass in Psycho (1960).[3]

Since then, the use of kinetic typography has become commonplace in film introductory titles and television advertisements. More recently, it has been a central feature of numerous television idents, notably Martin Lambie Nairn's first ident for the British Channel 4 television network in use from 1982.

Categories

Y. Y. Wong has proposed that it is important to distinguish between the properties of form (e.g. colour and font) and of behaviour (e.g. qualities of movement) in temporal typography. It is necessary to make this distinction in order to classify kinetic typography in ways that acknowledge their difference to static type (which may share properties of form, but not kinetic behaviours). Kinetic typography is therefore categorised according to behaviours or action, rather than appearance.

In classification, kinetic typography is a form of temporal typography (typography that is presented over time). It is distinct from other forms of temporal typography including 'serial presentation', which involves the sequential presentation of still typographic compositions.

Layouts

Barbara Brownie's model of temporal typography divides kinetic typography into 'motion typography' (subdivided into 'scrolling typography', 'dynamic layout') and 'fluid typography'.[4]

Motion typography

A frame of the opening crawl of episode 11 of Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe (1940)

In dynamic layout, text elements move in relation to one another. Letters and words may move away from one another on a 2D plane, or in three-dimensional space. Likewise, scrolling typography can scroll across the flat screen, or can appear to recede or advance. An iconic example is the Star Wars opening crawl inspired in the Flash Gordon serials.

Fluid typography

In fluid typography, letterforms change and evolve without necessarily changing location. An example is the subtitles of the international release of Night Watch: In a scene in which a character is being called by a vampire, he is in a pool and the camera is underwater. The caption appears as blood red text that dissolves as blood would in water.

Production

Kinetic typography is often produced using standard animation programs, including Adobe Flash, Adobe After Effects, and Apple Motion.[5] The effect is most often achieved by compositing layers of text such that either individual letters or words can be animated separately from the rest.

See also

  • ANSI art allowed for animation based on text characters.
  • AAlib allows to convert moving images into ASCII art.

References

  1. Bellantoni, Jeff and Woolman, Matt, 'Type in Motion', Thames & Hudson, 1999.
  2. Zimmerman, Bill. "History of Kinetic Typography". WizMotions. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  3. Lee, Johnny C.; Forlizzi, Jodi; Hudson, Scott E. "The Kinetic Typography Engine: An Extensible System for Animating Expressive Text" (PDF). Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  4. Brownie, Barbara (2007). "One Form, Many Letters: Fluid and transient letterforms in screen-based typographical artefacts". Networking Knowledge: Journal of the MeCCSA Postgraduate Network. 1 (2). Archived from the original on April 3, 2008. Retrieved March 21, 2017.
  5. http://kinetictypography.com/2-ways-of-communicating-with-kinetic-typography/%5B%5D
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