I am a retired color tech and spent years matching paint both "house paint" and industrial coatings, very rewarding. We also used a lot of food processing machines like the dough mixer for putties. As usual a great video, Thanks
It makes me laugh that when you go to Weta or American studios and they are really describing in detail what they do, and the processes that went into it, all their trial and error and really getting into their jobs and the film. But whenever you come to a British studio there just like 'Yeah i mix some colours together mate. What more do you want to know?' 'Oh err... how do you mix them together?' 'I just bung 'em in this thing. It mixes them.. There ain't much to it.'
As a Brit living in America, I sometimes get strange looks from my American colleagues when I describe certain tasks at my job so frankly without any gloss. Just sort of how we are.
I'm not sure if you're talking about certain videos where they're interviewing people as part of some promotion for the films or studio but I really do appreciate the "no bullshit" attitude like in this video. It feels more like some tour, likely for a job. It makes it feel less like some mystical arcane act only a wizard could do and something anyone is capable of doing. Not saying this makes the process less special or cool, but it helps ease any anxiety or worry about it.
Absolutely Amazing! They made films I loved when I was a kid and the impression endures. Everything I learned about making my own stop motion as a kid came from a behind-the-scenes DVD of Wallace and Gromit, and it inspired one of my first ever videos back in middle school.
I fell in love with stop motion qhen i was like 3 years old from watching rudolph the red nosed reindeer. To this day i love stop motion and claymation movies. I hope this type of filming never stops.
I made my own modeling clay as an art student. My recipe consisted of wax, light oil, bearing grease, and ball clay. It didn't smell great but it was stiff enough for me to carve and then take multiple molds off of the finished carving.
Paint stores have very simple technology that matches color, yet this guy obviously likes the attention he gets doing it by eye. Notice that he hardly smiles or elaborates on anything, yet when he tells Adam how long he's been doing it and that it 'has to be done by eye', he smiles, elaborates, and starts dancing around a bit. The idea of being a color mixer excites him, and at the cost of accuracy, he'd rather do it by eye, when computers will ALWAYS be more efficient (less wasted product until the desired color is achieved, less trial and error, less variation, etc.)
Aardman are the closest thing we have to Pixar and I'm SO incredibly proud of everything they've done/do. Thanks for taking the time to visit them Adam! Now, I only live an hour away from Bristol.....do you think if I showed up they'd show me around too??!!
We use these mixers to formulate BMC plastic also only 500 to 2000 pounds per batch Big enough to fall into. our big mixer was originally from Hershey Chocolate.
I've always been amazed by claymation and I'm glad I finally got to see more of how the models are made. Not to mention my son favorite movie right now is Shaun the Sheep.
Omg, can we all agree that it would be in the best interest of the channel if Adam did more building, either more one day builds or just start mini building projects split over separate videos?
I never knew aardman was stop motion until pirates came out (because I'm clever like that) and since then I've been absolutely amazed by what they do and the effort that goes into it
I freaking loved that show! NerdCubed did a video a couple of years ago which spoofed it which was also great: ruclips.net/video/cc77zmcSVXc/видео.html
I remember when the Creature Comforts ads were on TV (1990 - before the series, after the 1989 short). A Grand Day Out predates even the Creature Comforts short though - Nick Park's first production, I think. That year, my kid brother went to Aardman and interviewed Nick for Blue Peter! He was 10, I guess. But who remembers Morph? That was Peter Lord, co-founder of Aardman.
Amazing! I used to use a brand of plasticine called Belgrave, it was great for animating, really firm and resistant to heat, held its shape and didn’t smoosh, then a few years ago they cheaped out and changed the recipe and it was so terrible nobody wanted it, now you can’t get the old stuff (or the new stuff) anywhere. I’d love it if they sold newplast in Australia, the shipping costs for small batches make it prohibitively expensive :(
Oh man, I once mixed about 200lbs of porcelain clay. Had to steam clean the mixer to get out any remnants of any iron because when it leeches through during the firing, it creates speckles on the white surface. The Pug Mill was always my favorite part.
Thanks you for taking us behind the scene. So interesting... imagine grown men taking plasticine So seriously. Love Aardman studio. Some of the most Creative and witty folks around.
What kind of camera lens do they use to photograph stop motion miniatures? I wish these types of features would speak more about the peculiarities of capturing stop motion..
If you go back into the history of the channel I remember there being one that showed the setup of a previous Aardman production and the camera stuff. If nothing else, I know there are behind the scenes featurettes that Aardman has made themselves that accompany the DVD/blu-ray release of their movies that cover this.
it depends on the kind of animation and what it's being used for.. quit often with stop motion something like a canon 5D is great, in terms of lens that depends on the shot type... at Aardmas they also use an animation software called Dragonframe which is fantastic but Dragonframe isn't comparable with every camera so it of course has to be one that is :)
This is amazing! You don't know how happy I am to see this. I remember back in middle school doing a presentation on claymation work in film (which at the time there weren't many films chicken run had just come out) and I loved going over a lot of Aardman's work and such. Is so cool to see a more behind the scenes, in-depth look at the full process. So I thank you guys a lot for going out and doing this! Totally made my day!
Has your company had the chance to interview Aleksandr Petrov on his animation process? Since the late 80's he's had the beautifully unique approach of stop animating oil paintings on glass panes. So many of his films have this Tolstoy era themes communicated with flowing romantic impressionism. I think the only time that he's included modern technology in his animations' subjects was when he was recently commissioned to illustrate the evolution of Russian Railways from a blacksmith forging the initial spikes to people in a computer lab working on an underwater bullet train.
I was surprised to find the color is matched by eye. I thought they would have used the same tech photo editors used to calibrate monitors. From an engineering standpoint, I would have re-purposed a flat bed scanner to quantify RGB values for targeting the recipe results much the same way a paint shop scans your paint sample and matches your existing color.
I'm surprised that aardman dont get special batches with a specific pigment content from the factory if they are buying ton's of the stuff at a time. Its amazing stuff tho. Wonder of the didn't try just feeding the spaghetti back k to theachine without cutting it. Like a orobose
So glad that there are still stop-motion movies being made ("Early Man" and "Kubo and the Two Strings", etc). I hope this art form never dies.
Laika and aardman are my favorite studios
I love that the chickens from chicken run cam out of a machine that they were terrified of going into!
Now my brain is dripping out of my ears. Thank you!!!
lol that didn't even cross my mind thank you
Keir Young mmmmm... They cam...
You’re smart!
Why would chickens be terrified of a bubblegum extruding machine?
I am a retired color tech and spent years matching paint both "house paint" and industrial coatings, very rewarding. We also used a lot of food processing machines like the dough mixer for putties. As usual a great video, Thanks
Yeh colour theory is fascinating.
@@alic6958 & Darth Fader : I didn't even know about "color theory" and I have been an artist all my life. Where to find out more?
All the guys at Aardman seem so enthusiastic at explaining their work. It must be a great place to work.😊
I was totally not ready for that video to end.
Exactly how I felt!
A very talented flim company
Flim?
@@maceylps5947 Yes?
@@maceylps5947 r u stupid 😂
Betta 4lifez It's really not that hard to understand what he was trying to say. Unless you have a very small brain.
@@MrHelpingHand Exactly.
A man in a shed, judging things by eye. It's the British way.
It makes me laugh that when you go to Weta or American studios and they are really describing in detail what they do, and the processes that went into it, all their trial and error and really getting into their jobs and the film. But whenever you come to a British studio there just like 'Yeah i mix some colours together mate. What more do you want to know?'
'Oh err... how do you mix them together?'
'I just bung 'em in this thing. It mixes them.. There ain't much to it.'
Smurf.Soden, being a Brit myself, I can't tell you how much this made me laugh
:-)
Yeah, no bullshit trying to make it appear more fancy than it is. The way it should be.
As a Brit living in America, I sometimes get strange looks from my American colleagues when I describe certain tasks at my job so frankly without any gloss. Just sort of how we are.
Yeah we don’t see the need to exaggerate and over glamour it, I do find it funny comparing the differences in Adams interviews
I'm not sure if you're talking about certain videos where they're interviewing people as part of some promotion for the films or studio but I really do appreciate the "no bullshit" attitude like in this video. It feels more like some tour, likely for a job.
It makes it feel less like some mystical arcane act only a wizard could do and something anyone is capable of doing. Not saying this makes the process less special or cool, but it helps ease any anxiety or worry about it.
Wallace and Gromit was such a beautiful masterpiece. Never thought about this stuff as a kid.
Me waiting for him to dust that bit of chalk off the grill of that machine into the hopper......
lmfao thank you for this comment
I've been waiting for Aardman video for ages! This is awesome. It's incredible to see the amount of effort that goes into just making the clay.
I absolutely love it when Adam geeks out over the things he finds interesting
Could watch Adam Savage videos All day long
Absolutely Amazing! They made films I loved when I was a kid and the impression endures. Everything I learned about making my own stop motion as a kid came from a behind-the-scenes DVD of Wallace and Gromit, and it inspired one of my first ever videos back in middle school.
Color theory is crazy, this job would be quite stressful imho.
I hope they filmed more videos at Ardman. Loved Wallace and Gromit, was a shame when the voice actor died :(
According to Adam's Tweet there are a total of nine videos from this Aardman trip!
Pirates is one of their films...
I fell in love with stop motion qhen i was like 3 years old from watching rudolph the red nosed reindeer. To this day i love stop motion and claymation movies. I hope this type of filming never stops.
tfw you are a kid, and you played with the play-doh spaghetti mold too much, and it escalates into a career.
Yes
Adam is in the UK??????? :O I thought I felt a disturbance in the force! His so close!
He was. This was filmed in June last year, which is why they mention it being a hot day.
I felt that disturbance too
That's cool he was in the Uk
Ahhh that one day of summer....
I wonder if there could be a tested uk ?
me too home town as well
The blurred out logo on the box on top of the shelf becomes clearly visible during the transition to the next scene with adam.
I made my own modeling clay as an art student. My recipe consisted of wax, light oil, bearing grease, and ball clay. It didn't smell great but it was stiff enough for me to carve and then take multiple molds off of the finished carving.
Paint stores have very simple technology that matches color, yet this guy obviously likes the attention he gets doing it by eye. Notice that he hardly smiles or elaborates on anything, yet when he tells Adam how long he's been doing it and that it 'has to be done by eye', he smiles, elaborates, and starts dancing around a bit. The idea of being a color mixer excites him, and at the cost of accuracy, he'd rather do it by eye, when computers will ALWAYS be more efficient (less wasted product until the desired color is achieved, less trial and error, less variation, etc.)
Asking all the right questions... This is why I love watching Adam Savage & Tested
The guy with Adam is very very humble and seems to come just right out of the seventies
Every time Adam tosses the clay tendrils into the machine, it looks like he's throwing a face-hugger in.
Awesome video. ❤ Aardman. Can't believe the Tested crew was 5 minutes from my house and I didn't know. Wish I could have come down and said hello.
This is perfect!! 😍😍 awesome video
Make it stop
Make it Soph i
It's great to see Adam is so enthusiastic for animation. I thought he was just a tech / builder guy. I had no idea he even had experience in art.
I really appreciate this form of film making. Its so tedious but so worth it
Aardman are the closest thing we have to Pixar and I'm SO incredibly proud of everything they've done/do. Thanks for taking the time to visit them Adam! Now, I only live an hour away from Bristol.....do you think if I showed up they'd show me around too??!!
The guy mixing the clay has I job I've never expected to exist
We use these mixers to formulate BMC plastic also only 500 to 2000 pounds per batch Big enough to fall into. our big mixer was originally from Hershey Chocolate.
I love the energy of the interviewer
A Grand Day Out was my favourite Aardman film, so iconic.
Ah tested, forever reminding you of aspects in arts you would never have thought of otherwise, thank you!
There's a whole lot more going on behind the scenes than I thought!
Ended real quick, the last part was so satisfying to watch
This is perfect, I've been so curious about these filming processes since I was young and was watching Wallace and Grommet.
I've always been amazed by claymation and I'm glad I finally got to see more of how the models are made. Not to mention my son favorite movie right now is Shaun the Sheep.
Omg, can we all agree that it would be in the best interest of the channel if Adam did more building, either more one day builds or just start mini building projects split over separate videos?
I never knew aardman was stop motion until pirates came out (because I'm clever like that) and since then I've been absolutely amazed by what they do and the effort that goes into it
That was pretty cool, you should do more of these kind of videos...
I had visions of Lucille Ball in a pie factory when Adam started on the extruder! Too fun!
Anyone remember Creature Comforts?
I freaking loved that show! NerdCubed did a video a couple of years ago which spoofed it which was also great: ruclips.net/video/cc77zmcSVXc/видео.html
One of the best shows...I always got a chuckle out of the intro music!
I remember when the Creature Comforts ads were on TV (1990 - before the series, after the 1989 short). A Grand Day Out predates even the Creature Comforts short though - Nick Park's first production, I think. That year, my kid brother went to Aardman and interviewed Nick for Blue Peter! He was 10, I guess. But who remembers Morph? That was Peter Lord, co-founder of Aardman.
There is SOOO much to stop frame animation I really hope you shot more footage during your stay!
The colour of spam. Beautiful, It reminds me of that one Monthy Python sketch in the restaurant, everything with spam.
Amazing! I used to use a brand of plasticine called Belgrave, it was great for animating, really firm and resistant to heat, held its shape and didn’t smoosh, then a few years ago they cheaped out and changed the recipe and it was so terrible nobody wanted it, now you can’t get the old stuff (or the new stuff) anywhere. I’d love it if they sold newplast in Australia, the shipping costs for small batches make it prohibitively expensive :(
Oh man, I once mixed about 200lbs of porcelain clay. Had to steam clean the mixer to get out any remnants of any iron because when it leeches through during the firing, it creates speckles on the white surface. The Pug Mill was always my favorite part.
The Wallace and Gromit, Shaun everything they I love. Incredible to see how they create the colours. I want to know more!
Adam Savage + Aardman studios = Awesome content
Adam put to work cutting off a man’s pink sausages and throwing them back into his spam making machine.
Gotta love him.
Just met Nick Parks last night in Dublin, great to meet the creator of Wallis and Gromit
I love Chicken Run, such a great movie. Loved the characters!
I love Adam’s enthusiasm.
Thanks you for taking us behind the scene. So interesting... imagine grown men taking plasticine So seriously. Love Aardman studio. Some of the most Creative and witty folks around.
He asks such thoughtful questions
Blur fail. It says NCP Newclay Products in the cardboard box top right corner in the beginning.
You're a great interviewer.
Thanks for letting me vicariously work at aardman
I love how delighted Adam gets in these sorts of things! XD Thanks for the fascinating look behind the curtain, Tested!
This is so perfect!! Aardman is just the best!! I hope we are going to see the rest of the Aardman Studio
Not sure what they’re making but it looks delicious!! 🤤
Yes!!!!! I live in Bristol!!! OMG Adam is HERE!!!!!!!
Adams in his element here ,,having fun 👍
What kind of camera lens do they use to photograph stop motion miniatures? I wish these types of features would speak more about the peculiarities of capturing stop motion..
If you go back into the history of the channel I remember there being one that showed the setup of a previous Aardman production and the camera stuff. If nothing else, I know there are behind the scenes featurettes that Aardman has made themselves that accompany the DVD/blu-ray release of their movies that cover this.
danz machinz email or hit some of the animators on Instagram I'm sure they're willing to tell
danz machinz it says in the title this video is specifically about the clay. If every video covered every topic it wouldn't make any sense.
it depends on the kind of animation and what it's being used for.. quit often with stop motion something like a canon 5D is great, in terms of lens that depends on the shot type... at Aardmas they also use an animation software called Dragonframe which is fantastic but Dragonframe isn't comparable with every camera so it of course has to be one that is :)
Adam said in his Tweet about this video that it is the first of nine videos from this Aardman trip. They may well cover this in an upcoming video!
Very underrated production company
THIS FREAKING AWESOME I WISH I CAN MAKE A CLAY FIGURE OF MY SELF
What's stopping you?
You can tell Adam was having a brilliant time when he was making the coloured clay
I was not ready for that video to end.
This is amazing! You don't know how happy I am to see this. I remember back in middle school doing a presentation on claymation work in film (which at the time there weren't many films chicken run had just come out) and I loved going over a lot of Aardman's work and such. Is so cool to see a more behind the scenes, in-depth look at the full process. So I thank you guys a lot for going out and doing this! Totally made my day!
Too cool! Fun fact: It gets warmer because of a phenomenon called "viscous heating," which is essentially internal friction within the material.
I could watch that clay forever.
This was so amazing to watch!
who knew so much work went into making clay!
I've only just moved down to Bristol to learn that Adam was here 9 months ago. Raging.
Has your company had the chance to interview Aleksandr Petrov on his animation process? Since the late 80's he's had the beautifully unique approach of stop animating oil paintings on glass panes. So many of his films have this Tolstoy era themes communicated with flowing romantic impressionism. I think the only time that he's included modern technology in his animations' subjects was when he was recently commissioned to illustrate the evolution of Russian Railways from a blacksmith forging the initial spikes to people in a computer lab working on an underwater bullet train.
Can you please telll - what are the same or very similar animation stories made in stop motion and CGI (Computer-generated imagery)? :))
Love this as always! Sometimes the paracord batches I get are slightly different colors, but nothing compared to this! Haha
absolutely incredible
Man it would be a dream come true for me if I could work at aardman. I just love making things from clay.
I wish I could be a stop motion animator one day
Absolutely brilliant! Adam, you was asking all the right questions. Thanks guys
thanks Adam!your videos are very helpful for animation students like me!
Fascinating!
Two amazing Role Models in 1 Video... It's.... FUCKING AMAZING!!!
Easily one of the most talented studios ever.
Cool stuff Adam, thanks for teaching me something.
I was surprised to find the color is matched by eye. I thought they would have used the same tech photo editors used to calibrate monitors. From an engineering standpoint, I would have re-purposed a flat bed scanner to quantify RGB values for targeting the recipe results much the same way a paint shop scans your paint sample and matches your existing color.
I need one of those clay extruders to just constantly be sitting next to me. I would never get any work done, but lord I would be so pleased ;D
That big machine reminds me a lot of the Another brik in the wall musicvideo
Love the videos about Aardman. More please! tried to get a job there when I finished my animation course... no luck :(
America: smart, precise, mass produced
Britain: "We mix a bit of stuff together like chalk and pigment."
I'm surprised that aardman dont get special batches with a specific pigment content from the factory if they are buying ton's of the stuff at a time. Its amazing stuff tho. Wonder of the didn't try just feeding the spaghetti back k to theachine without cutting it. Like a orobose
I FREAKING LOVE WALLACE AND GROMIT OMG
HOLY SHIT MAN!!!!!!!!!!! THIS CLAY LOOKS SO FUCKING SATISFYING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Wow awsome !!! sooooo profesional Tested!
This is so awesome! I would love to do this.
This is amazing content guys
Great video. I really enjoy seeing the behind the scenes stuff.
couldn't you build a guide or mechanism to feed that extruded clay back into the hopper?
I was so thinking that too. Seems fairly logical really.
he probably feels it to see if he needs more oil or jelly.
Hands on to feel how good the clay is
They're not lazy.
I was thinking same thing right away. He could still reach up on top of the guide and grab piece to check for consistency from time to time.
Wait wait wait. ADAM WAS IN THE UK!!?? How did I not know would of loved to meet him