

The past couple of weeks I’ve been creating complex paper cutouts with my Silhouette Cameo paper cutting machine. You can create custom art in a drawing software like Adobe Illustrator and then export to the Silhouette software. I’ve used the machine to cut out pieces of black card stock and coloured acetate for that stained glass look. The image of the Immaculate Heart of Mary is a vectorized image taken from the Internet, digitally painted and printed on vellum. This is stuff for a new animation project.
Could I just make these images digitally rather than adding the time-consuming process of cutting and gluing a physical object? Yeah, I could, but I’ve tested this out in After Effects and I just don’t like the purely digital artwork. Looks flat and uninteresting. Besides, paper animation and painstakingly laborious workflows are kinda my brand now. Also, a character will be interacting with this image at a later point in the film, so it makes sense that it’s a physical prop.
The second image is a frame from Dragonframe. It’s darker because I stopped down the exposure so the light box doesn’t wash out the colours.
And, no, I’m not even remotely religious. I do, however, love the aesthetics of religious and esoteric art. That’s the sort of imagery I’m looking at for this project.









