This document provides an overview of investment readiness and fundraising for startups. It discusses defining funding needs, creating an investment readiness checklist, and sources of funding. Key aspects of fundraising covered include creating economic feasibility projections, developing pitch decks, identifying the target market size, outlining the business model and revenue sources, highlighting any proprietary technology, comparing to competitors, detailing the marketing plan, introducing the founding team, and projecting financial milestones and use of funds. The presentation emphasizes keeping pitch decks concise and focused on the problem, solution, market opportunity, and team.
This document provides biographical information on several artists and discusses some of their notable works. It describes Paul Gauguin's early life living in Peru, France and Tahiti and mentions two of his paintings from 1893-1894. It also summarizes Wifredo Lam's artwork addressing the relationship between the jungle and Cuban people and potential influences on Upton Sinclair's novel "The Jungle." Additionally, it discusses Constantin Brancusi as a neighbor of Modigliani's in Montparnasse and analyzes Brancusi's "Endless Column" sculpture. Finally, it analyzes Andy Warhol's 1981 "Myths" series including his work "The Star (Greta Garbo)" portraying
Predictors of Women Participation in Entrepreneurial Activities in North Cota...Pflcw Secretariat
Dr. Sindaolan D. Galla, GAD Director of University of Southern Mindanao, discussed their research findings on women entrepreneurial activities in North Cotabato
This document contains templates for various types of diagrams and charts that can be used in PowerPoint presentations. It includes templates for block diagrams, cycle diagrams, flow charts, organizational charts, and more. Each template contains placeholder text that can be replaced with the user's own text and titles. Instructions are provided for how to apply a logo to all slides using the slide master. The templates are intended to provide easy to customize visual layouts for presenting different types of information.
This document provides screenshots and descriptions of edits made to a draft trailer. Selective video and photo inserts were added to tell the story and build suspense. Black inserts and quick cuts between clips were used to quicken the pace. Text inserts summarize the story line. A variety of shots and camera angles were used, and sound effects, music, and transitions were added to create dramatic effect.
This document contains a film schedule and scripts for a documentary about paranormal activity. It details the times, dates, locations and shots planned for filming at various reportedly haunted locations around Coventry, UK, including the old hall asylum, a graveyard, woods and a lake. It also includes scripts for scenes setting up a camp for filming a paranormal blog and the actors giving updates about their filming.
The document provides an analysis and critique of several different movie posters from various genres. Some key points made include:
- Poster backgrounds, images, font styles, color schemes, and placement of text/images can provide cues to the genre and give context about the film's story.
- Effective posters attract attention, clearly communicate the genre, and intrigue viewers about the film's plot.
- Common conventions like listing actors/directors and including critic quotes can help market films, but designs still need to be clear and visually appealing.
- Elements like character costumes, props, and compositional techniques can subtly reveal aspects of the genre and narrative without being overt.
This document provides an overview of investment readiness and fundraising for startups. It discusses defining funding needs, creating an investment readiness checklist, and sources of funding. Key aspects of fundraising covered include creating economic feasibility projections, developing pitch decks, identifying the target market size, outlining the business model and revenue sources, highlighting any proprietary technology, comparing to competitors, detailing the marketing plan, introducing the founding team, and projecting financial milestones and use of funds. The presentation emphasizes keeping pitch decks concise and focused on the problem, solution, market opportunity, and team.
This document provides biographical information on several artists and discusses some of their notable works. It describes Paul Gauguin's early life living in Peru, France and Tahiti and mentions two of his paintings from 1893-1894. It also summarizes Wifredo Lam's artwork addressing the relationship between the jungle and Cuban people and potential influences on Upton Sinclair's novel "The Jungle." Additionally, it discusses Constantin Brancusi as a neighbor of Modigliani's in Montparnasse and analyzes Brancusi's "Endless Column" sculpture. Finally, it analyzes Andy Warhol's 1981 "Myths" series including his work "The Star (Greta Garbo)" portraying
Predictors of Women Participation in Entrepreneurial Activities in North Cota...Pflcw Secretariat
Dr. Sindaolan D. Galla, GAD Director of University of Southern Mindanao, discussed their research findings on women entrepreneurial activities in North Cotabato
This document contains templates for various types of diagrams and charts that can be used in PowerPoint presentations. It includes templates for block diagrams, cycle diagrams, flow charts, organizational charts, and more. Each template contains placeholder text that can be replaced with the user's own text and titles. Instructions are provided for how to apply a logo to all slides using the slide master. The templates are intended to provide easy to customize visual layouts for presenting different types of information.
This document provides screenshots and descriptions of edits made to a draft trailer. Selective video and photo inserts were added to tell the story and build suspense. Black inserts and quick cuts between clips were used to quicken the pace. Text inserts summarize the story line. A variety of shots and camera angles were used, and sound effects, music, and transitions were added to create dramatic effect.
This document contains a film schedule and scripts for a documentary about paranormal activity. It details the times, dates, locations and shots planned for filming at various reportedly haunted locations around Coventry, UK, including the old hall asylum, a graveyard, woods and a lake. It also includes scripts for scenes setting up a camp for filming a paranormal blog and the actors giving updates about their filming.
The document provides an analysis and critique of several different movie posters from various genres. Some key points made include:
- Poster backgrounds, images, font styles, color schemes, and placement of text/images can provide cues to the genre and give context about the film's story.
- Effective posters attract attention, clearly communicate the genre, and intrigue viewers about the film's plot.
- Common conventions like listing actors/directors and including critic quotes can help market films, but designs still need to be clear and visually appealing.
- Elements like character costumes, props, and compositional techniques can subtly reveal aspects of the genre and narrative without being overt.
This document provides an analysis of magazine covers from different genres including children's magazines, action films, and horror films. It examines various design elements of the covers like image placement, text styling, color schemes, and use of cover lines. Overall assessments are given for what techniques are effective at representing the genre and what could be improved. Elements like bright colors for children's magazines and cracked text for horror films are evaluated positively as conveying the right genre conventions.
This document analyzes and summarizes several horror movie posters. Key points include:
- Horror posters often feature facial features, especially eyes, to draw viewers in. Imagery should appear unsettling or disturbing without being unrealistic.
- Effective posters tell a story through subtle visual clues and use color, font, and composition conventions like placing the title above the image. Unusual elements can make a poster stand out if they enhance the disturbing tone.
- Imagery works best when it leaves some to the imagination but clearly conveys a sense of danger, violence, or psychological tension through facial expressions and props like locks or crosses. Simplicity can be powerful when executed well.
The document analyzes trailers from different movie genres and identifies common cinematography techniques used. For a comedy trailer like The Hangover, fast pacing and transitions between clips are used to pack a lot in similar to a horror trailer. For an action trailer like Skyfall, black inserts are used to flash between shots quickly and heighten the pace. Music is also important, using dramatic music for Skyfall and rock music to set the tone for comedies. Common techniques identified help establish genre expectations through visual conventions in movie trailers.
This document appears to be a collection of screenshots and photos from a student's sketchpad and photo editing project called "Levitation". It includes images documenting the development process using techniques like masks in Photoshop. There are also images researching commercial perfume photography for inspiration. The work is compared to photographers Nan Goldin for modern influences and Philippe Halsman for more traditional styles.
This document discusses experimenting with different live text effects, fonts, colors, and backgrounds for a horror film production or trailer. The author tests various textures, colors, effects like apparition and wobble, and movement to see what looks eerie or ghost-like. They ultimately choose a red slot machine text over a moving brick wall background to symbolize luck and match the film's theme, and red decks of cards that flip over to reveal the text as one of the best effects that ties into the trailer.
The document outlines the process of designing a logo for a film production company called Corrosive Media. It goes through 11 stages of developing the logo, trying different visual elements, colors, and text styles. The final logo features a skull and crossbones symbol above the word "Corrosive" in a splattered text style, with "Media" below in a matching style on a black background using the horror-genre associated colors of red, black, and white. The process showed exploring conventions, simplifying elements, and refining the design until a clean, professional logo was achieved.
This document provides suggestions for filming locations that have an old, abandoned, or run-down aesthetic. Some potential locations mentioned include old Victorian houses, warehouses, churches with similar architectural features, derelict buildings from closed mental asylums or hospitals, old libraries with their corridors and windows, alleyways and un-used sheds that have overgrown plants, and museums that recreate historical indoor settings. The goal is to find locations that look discarded, unloved, and capture an atmosphere of the past.
This document discusses editing a movie maker interview video. It mentions adding transitions at the start of the video to make it more interesting. It also discusses adding an auto movie theme and editing the credits. The finished project is basic but future edits will become more advanced.
This document discusses filming and editing techniques used in creating a draft horror movie trailer. Handheld camera shots and pans were used to set the scene of an abandoned asylum. Point-of-view shots through a graveyard add suspense. Transitions and effects like sepia tone and reversed footage help make the trailer feel more polished and creepy. Areas for improvement in the next draft include developing their own logo and removing unnecessary transitions.
This document provides inspiration for different elements of a trailer from various movie trailers:
1) The Klinger trailer uses an abandoned factory location effectively and adds historical context and inserts to quickly give an overview of the story. Its quick pace and flickering editing create suspense.
2) The Inkeeper uses establishing shots that quickly paint a picture, track shots that create suspense, and overhead angles to show a whole space.
3) The Dark Knight shows how costumes can be elaborate, colorful, and link to a character's tricks or props. Masks are also an effective horror convention.
This document discusses costume and makeup ideas for a character called the Trixter. It includes images of exaggerated puppet mouths, gory makeup designs, and full face paint ideas inspired by the Joker from Batman. Straight jackets and a chef's jacket are proposed for the costume. Other costume elements mentioned include old-fashioned slippers, a top hat, and canes. Inspirations discussed are the calculating and menacing personality of the Joker, as well as the mad and bright makeup of the Mad Hatter from Alice in Wonderland. The goal is to portray the mad effects of drugs through the costume and makeup design.
This document summarizes the process of designing a magazine cover based on a poster. The designer chose dark colors and a menacing image to convey the horror genre. Text elements like the masthead, subtitles, and taglines were added in different fonts and colors for visual interest. An image was selected to fill the cover that matched the color scheme. Minor details like the date, issue number, and price were also added to make the design look more professional. The final layout took inspiration from the Empire magazine cover style.
This document outlines the process of creating a horror movie poster over six stages. In the first stage, the creator adds a black background and stars using brush tools to mimic professional posters. In stage two, text is added including actor and reviewer names. Stage three sees the addition of a tagline convention. Stage four adds a dripping blood title and masked actor image. Producers' logos are placed at the bottom in stage five. Finally, ratings are added in stage six to complete the poster.
This document discusses the process of designing a movie poster. It describes 4 revisions made to the poster's layout and design. Key elements added include a black background, the names of actors at the top in white, the release date, an image from the internet on the right side with its background removed, and a tagline on the side of the page in a chunky font. Criticism is given that the billing block at the top may not be as readable as at the bottom of the page. The final poster layout has the title on the left side in red and white, the image on the right, and the release date and billing block at the bottom.
This document contains draft layouts and images for a horror film poster titled "Trixter". It discusses 6 image layouts for the poster, evaluating the effectiveness of different images, editing techniques, and text placements. The author experiments with incorporating multiple faces behind the main image, inspired by the poster for the film "Shutter". One layout splits the poster into two images showing both innocent and horrifying sides of the doll character. Overall the document provides process notes and assessments of different design options for creating an effective horror movie poster in the genre's conventions.
This document discusses the process of creating a film poster for a horror movie called "Trixter". It evaluates several image and layout options for the poster. One layout features a close-up image of a doll with cracks in its face alongside text. Another uses a black and white photo edited to look HD with subtle color and overlaid faces to resemble the poster for "Shutter". The best option combines an image of the doll over layered faces with red title text that stands out effectively.
The group is discussing ideas for creating a storyboard and film trailer. They plan to each create separate storyboard versions and combine them into a single final storyboard. They also discuss researching other student work for inspiration, potential actors to interview for roles, and different techniques for presenting their work such as uploading videos to YouTube and embedding them in a WordPress site. They will use movie maker software to edit interview videos and add elements like text and images to enhance video quality.
This document outlines a storyboard and trailer concept for a horror film. The trailer would follow a group of teenagers who find an abandoned doll and take it to a friend's house as a prank. Strange events then start occurring, with the doll appearing to control the actions of one of the girls. Scenes include the doll moving on its own and the girl engaging in strange movements. The trailer is meant to build tension and unease through the use of music, camera techniques like close-ups, and transitions between short clips. It concludes with a title card revealing the film's name and release date.
This document provides an analysis of various fonts and images used in horror movie posters and trailers. It identifies several conventions commonly used in horror genre design, such as:
- Skinny or unbalanced fonts in red or white colors.
- Distorted letters, numbers replacing letters, or backwards letters.
- Dark or unsettling images featuring blood, wounds, scary children or adults in costumes.
- Manipulated facial features like changed eye colors to look inhuman.
- Shadowy, dark lighting with a sense of lurking threat or suspense.
The document examines many examples and evaluates how well each one conveys the horror genre through its visual design choices. Common techniques like
This document provides draft layouts for three film posters. The first poster layout is inspired by the Jaws film poster, with a simple but effective design featuring a powerful central image. The second poster places the image as the background and features a small tagline. The third poster layout is more text-heavy, inspired by the poster for The Last Exorcism and including more details like the written by credit and release date. Variations are shown within the poster layouts to demonstrate different design options.
This document provides an analysis of magazine covers from different genres including children's magazines, action films, and horror films. It examines various design elements of the covers like image placement, text styling, color schemes, and use of cover lines. Overall assessments are given for what techniques are effective at representing the genre and what could be improved. Elements like bright colors for children's magazines and cracked text for horror films are evaluated positively as conveying the right genre conventions.
This document analyzes and summarizes several horror movie posters. Key points include:
- Horror posters often feature facial features, especially eyes, to draw viewers in. Imagery should appear unsettling or disturbing without being unrealistic.
- Effective posters tell a story through subtle visual clues and use color, font, and composition conventions like placing the title above the image. Unusual elements can make a poster stand out if they enhance the disturbing tone.
- Imagery works best when it leaves some to the imagination but clearly conveys a sense of danger, violence, or psychological tension through facial expressions and props like locks or crosses. Simplicity can be powerful when executed well.
The document analyzes trailers from different movie genres and identifies common cinematography techniques used. For a comedy trailer like The Hangover, fast pacing and transitions between clips are used to pack a lot in similar to a horror trailer. For an action trailer like Skyfall, black inserts are used to flash between shots quickly and heighten the pace. Music is also important, using dramatic music for Skyfall and rock music to set the tone for comedies. Common techniques identified help establish genre expectations through visual conventions in movie trailers.
This document appears to be a collection of screenshots and photos from a student's sketchpad and photo editing project called "Levitation". It includes images documenting the development process using techniques like masks in Photoshop. There are also images researching commercial perfume photography for inspiration. The work is compared to photographers Nan Goldin for modern influences and Philippe Halsman for more traditional styles.
This document discusses experimenting with different live text effects, fonts, colors, and backgrounds for a horror film production or trailer. The author tests various textures, colors, effects like apparition and wobble, and movement to see what looks eerie or ghost-like. They ultimately choose a red slot machine text over a moving brick wall background to symbolize luck and match the film's theme, and red decks of cards that flip over to reveal the text as one of the best effects that ties into the trailer.
The document outlines the process of designing a logo for a film production company called Corrosive Media. It goes through 11 stages of developing the logo, trying different visual elements, colors, and text styles. The final logo features a skull and crossbones symbol above the word "Corrosive" in a splattered text style, with "Media" below in a matching style on a black background using the horror-genre associated colors of red, black, and white. The process showed exploring conventions, simplifying elements, and refining the design until a clean, professional logo was achieved.
This document provides suggestions for filming locations that have an old, abandoned, or run-down aesthetic. Some potential locations mentioned include old Victorian houses, warehouses, churches with similar architectural features, derelict buildings from closed mental asylums or hospitals, old libraries with their corridors and windows, alleyways and un-used sheds that have overgrown plants, and museums that recreate historical indoor settings. The goal is to find locations that look discarded, unloved, and capture an atmosphere of the past.
This document discusses editing a movie maker interview video. It mentions adding transitions at the start of the video to make it more interesting. It also discusses adding an auto movie theme and editing the credits. The finished project is basic but future edits will become more advanced.
This document discusses filming and editing techniques used in creating a draft horror movie trailer. Handheld camera shots and pans were used to set the scene of an abandoned asylum. Point-of-view shots through a graveyard add suspense. Transitions and effects like sepia tone and reversed footage help make the trailer feel more polished and creepy. Areas for improvement in the next draft include developing their own logo and removing unnecessary transitions.
This document provides inspiration for different elements of a trailer from various movie trailers:
1) The Klinger trailer uses an abandoned factory location effectively and adds historical context and inserts to quickly give an overview of the story. Its quick pace and flickering editing create suspense.
2) The Inkeeper uses establishing shots that quickly paint a picture, track shots that create suspense, and overhead angles to show a whole space.
3) The Dark Knight shows how costumes can be elaborate, colorful, and link to a character's tricks or props. Masks are also an effective horror convention.
This document discusses costume and makeup ideas for a character called the Trixter. It includes images of exaggerated puppet mouths, gory makeup designs, and full face paint ideas inspired by the Joker from Batman. Straight jackets and a chef's jacket are proposed for the costume. Other costume elements mentioned include old-fashioned slippers, a top hat, and canes. Inspirations discussed are the calculating and menacing personality of the Joker, as well as the mad and bright makeup of the Mad Hatter from Alice in Wonderland. The goal is to portray the mad effects of drugs through the costume and makeup design.
This document summarizes the process of designing a magazine cover based on a poster. The designer chose dark colors and a menacing image to convey the horror genre. Text elements like the masthead, subtitles, and taglines were added in different fonts and colors for visual interest. An image was selected to fill the cover that matched the color scheme. Minor details like the date, issue number, and price were also added to make the design look more professional. The final layout took inspiration from the Empire magazine cover style.
This document outlines the process of creating a horror movie poster over six stages. In the first stage, the creator adds a black background and stars using brush tools to mimic professional posters. In stage two, text is added including actor and reviewer names. Stage three sees the addition of a tagline convention. Stage four adds a dripping blood title and masked actor image. Producers' logos are placed at the bottom in stage five. Finally, ratings are added in stage six to complete the poster.
This document discusses the process of designing a movie poster. It describes 4 revisions made to the poster's layout and design. Key elements added include a black background, the names of actors at the top in white, the release date, an image from the internet on the right side with its background removed, and a tagline on the side of the page in a chunky font. Criticism is given that the billing block at the top may not be as readable as at the bottom of the page. The final poster layout has the title on the left side in red and white, the image on the right, and the release date and billing block at the bottom.
This document contains draft layouts and images for a horror film poster titled "Trixter". It discusses 6 image layouts for the poster, evaluating the effectiveness of different images, editing techniques, and text placements. The author experiments with incorporating multiple faces behind the main image, inspired by the poster for the film "Shutter". One layout splits the poster into two images showing both innocent and horrifying sides of the doll character. Overall the document provides process notes and assessments of different design options for creating an effective horror movie poster in the genre's conventions.
This document discusses the process of creating a film poster for a horror movie called "Trixter". It evaluates several image and layout options for the poster. One layout features a close-up image of a doll with cracks in its face alongside text. Another uses a black and white photo edited to look HD with subtle color and overlaid faces to resemble the poster for "Shutter". The best option combines an image of the doll over layered faces with red title text that stands out effectively.
The group is discussing ideas for creating a storyboard and film trailer. They plan to each create separate storyboard versions and combine them into a single final storyboard. They also discuss researching other student work for inspiration, potential actors to interview for roles, and different techniques for presenting their work such as uploading videos to YouTube and embedding them in a WordPress site. They will use movie maker software to edit interview videos and add elements like text and images to enhance video quality.
This document outlines a storyboard and trailer concept for a horror film. The trailer would follow a group of teenagers who find an abandoned doll and take it to a friend's house as a prank. Strange events then start occurring, with the doll appearing to control the actions of one of the girls. Scenes include the doll moving on its own and the girl engaging in strange movements. The trailer is meant to build tension and unease through the use of music, camera techniques like close-ups, and transitions between short clips. It concludes with a title card revealing the film's name and release date.
This document provides an analysis of various fonts and images used in horror movie posters and trailers. It identifies several conventions commonly used in horror genre design, such as:
- Skinny or unbalanced fonts in red or white colors.
- Distorted letters, numbers replacing letters, or backwards letters.
- Dark or unsettling images featuring blood, wounds, scary children or adults in costumes.
- Manipulated facial features like changed eye colors to look inhuman.
- Shadowy, dark lighting with a sense of lurking threat or suspense.
The document examines many examples and evaluates how well each one conveys the horror genre through its visual design choices. Common techniques like
This document provides draft layouts for three film posters. The first poster layout is inspired by the Jaws film poster, with a simple but effective design featuring a powerful central image. The second poster places the image as the background and features a small tagline. The third poster layout is more text-heavy, inspired by the poster for The Last Exorcism and including more details like the written by credit and release date. Variations are shown within the poster layouts to demonstrate different design options.