This is a tumblelog, kinda like a blog but with short-form, mixed-media posts with stuff I like. Scroll down a bit to start reading, or a bit more to read more about me.
(via iareangeline)
im a proud math major! hahaha. :))
PWDE BANG NAH?:))
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- During the production of Up, the Animation Department produced an average of 4 seconds of animation a week.
- Paradise Falls is based on the world-famous Angel Falls in Venezuela. Up’s version is 1.8 miles tall or 9,700 ft., which is almost three times higher than Angel falls which stands at 3212 ft.
- To walk from the location where Carl and Russell first arrive on the tepui to the top of Paradise Falls would require a 14.5 mile trek. It’s about 6.75 miles across to the nearest tepui when they look out across the landscape.
- Pixar had a group of live ostriches come to the studio for reference for Kevin. The ostriches belonged to veterinarian Dr. James Stewart. The Art Department took a field trip to his farm where he also kept zebras.
- There are 10,297 balloons lifting Carl’s house.
- Pixar consulted with an architect to learn about home foundations to make the lift off of Carl’s house more believable.
- All of the crowd dogs were actually a single dog based on Beta, tweaked around in shape and groom to look like a pack of 50.
- The Spirit of Adventure is a dirigible, a rigid airship, and not a blimp, which has no rigid frame. It is much larger than any dirigible ever built.
- The Spirit of Adventure is 3,061 ft. long, which is 3.8 times longer than the Hindenburg.
- The knots connecting Russell’s rope between the garden hose and his backpack on the tether are real usable knots. There is a rolling hitch used to secure the rope to the garden hose, and three-half-hitches connecting the rope to the carabineer on his backpack. Both of these knots would have been something that Russell learned as a Wilderness Explorer.