Sunday, April 15, 2007

Final Project by Antonella C


My project is called ‘Windows: Structure and Formality.’ It’s finished and ready to present! I’ve created a site to place my Web Art in, including the project description
( Web Art ). I really enjoyed working on this project. I learned how to use Flash, yay! Yet best of all, I had the chance to do more research on the subject I’m most interested in, & develop my message through a different art medium: web art. Thank you Judith Doyle and class for the inspirations!

(Problem is that I can’t seem to upload my flash project to the file manager (site). Although I compressed the size of my project, from what I learned in last class, apparently 5.7MB is still too large to upload; I need it to be max. 5MB. It appears that the Flash Publishing settings doesn’t compress it enough. I’ll be showing the project during presentation as a Projector… unless anyone has any last suggestions.)

5 comments:

Geoff Inwood said...

Hello there,

Thats a really nice image, however -at least in IE-, I appear to be unable to interact with it in any way. (is there a chance that you uploaded the wrong file by mistake?)

None the less, I really like the image.

Caio,
Geoff Inwood
w: www.geoffinwood.com
e: admin@geoffinwood.com

Antonella said...

Like i said on my post, i'm having problems uploading my flash project onto my site.

Antonella said...

It’s now up and running and working. Just as a side note, it takes about a minute for the page (web art) to upload. But once it does, enjoy!

a7mc said...

Nice work. I really like the idea of the "windows" (pictures of windows slipt up into windows displayed in a computer window). The images look great too. My only suggestion would be to have the boxes loop back to the beginning when you get to the end. There were a couple of images I wanted to see, but I acidentally clicked on a box twice, and couldn't get that part of the image back. (but since I'm not there for your presentation, you may have a reason for not looping...)

A7

Anonymous said...

there's a strange therapeutic quality to this piece in the simplicity of interaction involved. well done