When I was applying to Blue Zoo internship and researching the company, I found out they provide Albert training to their staff – Blue Zoo is a B Corporation and it’s very important to them to create sustainably.

Upon researching further, the training is provided online by BAFTA and available to individuals. The page states it’s aimed at those in production roles, so I reached out to see whether I could attend as an aspiring production assistant – which was absolutely okay!

It was extremely informative to know what counts towards a sustainability rating and how one can acquire sustainable production certificate.

And now I’m trained in Sustainable Production.

Before attempting backgrounds for the final piece, I looked into various Animation Background Painters’ work. I don’t expect my work to be at that level, however, it was very informative to see their workflow and gave me tools to feel more confident about the next steps. I have linked the videos below if anyone wants to explore them further.

Here are the videos in the order of the notes:

Olof Storm’s “2D Animation in Clip Studio Paint – Beginner Tips & Tricks” – https://youtu.be/UTQgOcZ35ik

The SPA Studios’ “KLAUS | How to paint a ‘Klaus’ style Background” – https://youtu.be/vqJ_pq2YZK0

Andrea Gerstmann’s “Animation Stuff: Forest Background Painting” – https://youtu.be/zijtkZ03XLg

Nicholas Kennedy’s “Background Painting Walkthrough for Animation” – https://youtu.be/-3656QBywSg

Devin Elle Kurtz’s “Background Art 101” – https://youtu.be/t4s2aIAKZ6s

Devin Elle Kurtz’s “Painting a Field – Free brush-set” – https://youtu.be/jzwkgw9SE_Q

Devin Elle Kurtz’s “Mountain Field Painting Tutorial (With my new free brushes!) – https://youtu.be/P8lNvU85ZXk

I was incredibly excited to attend this talk, seeing as Julie the us a producer and I would love to get my foot into a production assistant role.

It was very informative to hear about her experiences and I had a couple of questions regarding her journey, especially knowing she had experience with small as well as major studios.

Listening to Jenny talk about her practice truly made me less anxious. I remembered her from the Sound Workshop from the last project (and because her film My Mother’s Eyes made me cry every time).

She gave us great insight about the festival work she’s done and been recognised for and how helpful that was in her independent art practice. (Considering every single artist speaks about the importance of the festivals, I will definitely make more effort to look into them).

It was very helpful to talk to her about life after graduation, considering she completed the same course, and how to balance doing freelance work and having a day job on the side.

Today we had the chance to listen about Selom’s experience in the industry so far. He talked to us about individual studios he’s worked for and what went well, what challenged him, and why it ended (I haven’t included notes from that just in case).

It was very kind of Selom to share that insight and give us advice based on his experience so that we could learn from it. He’s also shared a list of ‘tips so far’. It was also sort of encouraging to hear about things that didn’t go to plan – such as not getting on the course straight way or making a mistake on the job.

When he graduated, his financial situation was quite similar to mine – living with a partner and paying a mortgage. This made me a bit less worried whether it was ‘too late’ to enter the industry. So I’m thankful for this.

Neeraja’s work is very captivating and endearing. Her character designs on “Meow or Never” reminded me of Animal Crossing Villagers and the musical side seemed influenced by Disney – which she confirmed.

She also expressed how the festivals really helped her get noticed and how good they were for her as an artist.

It was also good to hear what other skills she found useful in the industry.

“Don’t just sit back and expect things to come to you!”

last month I decided to reach out to Viktoria to better inform my decisions for job and internship hunting. I’m currently looking into production roles, given my broad experience of sculpture, prop making, stop-mo and 2d animation. I think I’m the kind of person who loves to be involved and working with a team.

Victoria got a Production Assistant job at THE LINE – an animation studio I would absolutely love to work with (if it wasn’t already obvious from my previous research).

I’ll be looking to reach out to more individuals once it’s less stressful.

It was a pleasure speaking to the students from Royal College of Music to collaborate on our films.

Although exciting I was also stressed, knowing I was basically pitching myself and my film because it was also the Composers’ choice with whom they’d like to work. I might have gone through my presentation a bit speedier than I wanted due to this as the room was much more fuller than anticipated – I also forgot how to give presentations in person? I’ve given my presentations online before and it’s much less stressful when I don’t have to make eye contact. It’s definitely something I’d like to practice more.

For my final presentation, I would like to try and practice it in class with either fellow students or teachers.

It was really a great experience to hang out and talk with the composers a bit more casually with the composers in the Bar. It definitely encouraged me to try and go to more events in person and network with more creatives.

Also, I was very lucky to be approached by 3 different composers who would like to work with me on my film. It was a bit nerve-wracking to go through their portfolios knowing I could only choose one. I tried to be very encouraging in my ‘rejection’ emails, as I decided to collaborate with Haukur Karlsson due to his flexibility.

It was extremely informative to hear about Alexandra’s experiences and what it’s like to work with directors as a composer. It is always so useful to hear the other side and the best way to learn.

We also had a chance to look at her Cue Sheets to see what kind of feedback was industry standard.

As well as this, I found Alexandra’s exercise very insightful: we drew a random ‘feeling’ and needed to find a piece of music to express it, then see if the rest of the class guessed it right. There are some feelings that will easily overlap, and others that would definitely become clearer with visuals.

I’m really thankful to Sophie for her insight into the industry. She was kind enough to bring up budgets and day rates with us. She also talked us through having a personal as well as a commercial style to be a more successful freelancer until our personal work can pay for everything. 

It was really good to look at her pitch examples and find out how to market our ideas and make them approachable and exciting.

She also took some time to speak to me and my aspirations. I managed to show her my Production Schedule and express my interest in Production Management. Having learnt that I previously did sculpture and was now specialising in 2D animation, she recommended I look at applying to BlinkInk Studios as they work in many different styles.

Funnily enough, apparently last year she spoke to a student in the same seat last year who is now working in Production. Fingers crossed!