Blog Action Day 2010 Water Themed Roundup

Blog Action Day 2010 Water Themed Roundup

This year’s Blog Action Day theme is water, so I have found some of the best tutorials for creating water-like looks in After Effects, as well as some cool videos that might quench your inspirational thirst!



Topher Welsh is TopherWelsh on Videohive
  • http://tiny.cc/mialazar Mia Lazar

    Water is great effect Toyota Recycling a Water Bottle looks great.

  • forcy

    Mia, are you free this evening?

  • http://www.marvgilbert.com/ Marv

    Cool stuff, Thanks for putting these together.

  • kamran nabipour

    Tanx a lot 4 all Tuts ;-)

  • http://www.smartroutetour.com/ tour and transportation services

    this is really extraordinary work…………

  • frankyframe

    i ve already watched most clips of them yet :(

  • http://www.cher-lloyd.com Cher Lloyd

    I’m currently working on some water projects and it’s nice to see some contemporary water designs. Thanks a lot!

  • http://www.trepaning.com/blog trepaning

    They list “Composting” instead of “Compositing” at AT&T – “Whole New World” http://motionographer.com/theater/psyop-whole-new-world/ :)

  • http://www.bengregory.co.uk Benny

    The Story of bottle water vid is damn good!

  • http://yclenning.no-ip.org KeycleVer

    With regard to the states of the weather which continue but for a day, that which is northerly, braces the body, giving it tone, agility, and color, improves the sense of hearing, dries up the bowels, pinches the eyes, and aggravates any previous pain which may have been seated in the chest. But the southerly relaxes the body, and renders it humid, brings on dullness of hearing, heaviness of the head, and vertigo, impairs the movements of the eyes and the whole body, and renders the alvine discharges watery.

  • http://sourceforge.net/projects/freemind/?source=directory Zewgreale

    A mind mapper, and at the same time an easy-to-operate hierarchical editor with strong emphasis on folding.
    These two are not really two different things, just two different descriptions of a single application.
    Often used for knowledge and content mgmt.