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Rob Freitas é influenciadora, criadora de conteúdo e comunicadora do mercado da beleza e luxo. Sua trajetória inspiradora e pautada na força de vontade e sonhos cujo o ‘céu era o limite', a trouxe pra um cenário de muitas conquistas pessoais e profissionais, e ao PodDelas! O papo será sobre carreira, auto estima e muita beleza! A nova campanha de Dove Desodorantes celebra a diversidade de corpos e peles, em especial as axilas. A fórmula de Dove contém 1/4 de creme hidratante e vitamina E, que cuida, protege e repara desde o primeiro uso. Garanta o seu: https://www.amazon.com.br/stores/page/707A3F97-DB17-4A95-AB01-9F0FCC3F3D59?ingress=3&visitId=8029f6a0-8eba-4116-b24a-d3e011f7b4e0 ANFITRIÃS:
Episode 70: Welcome to episode 70! Woohooooooo! And to celebrate I have something a little different for you, something I should have started doing a while ago. We are heading into the lab or workshop if you will…. Our Last looks guest today is Rob Freitas, Rob is a Mold Maker and from what I've heard, a damn good done! Episode brought to you by: LUXE SKIN FX Making a Monster Book : https://amzn.to/47836sB Cinefex No.16 : https://amzn.to/3OJXD4d Notebook: https://amzn.to/44My6wz Become a Sponsor: https://forms.gle/xSaSFd4QjKx1GXMe8 BUY ME A COFFEE: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/lastlooks
No episódio de hoje trouxemos uma das pessoas mais carismáticas da internet. Rob Freitas, com toda sua simpatia e autenticidade, vem ao Cliche Talks para trazer sua trajetória dentro do mundo da beleza: - Como começou a trabalhar na internet - Sua participação pelo BBB (sim, isso mesmo) - Sua afinidade com o mercado de beleza - Seu trabalho com grandes maisons de luxo. - Sonhos e planejamentos Além de um episódio riquissimo, foi com certeza um dos mais engraçados da temporada. Rob, mais uma vez muito obrigada pela sua presença essencial em nosso Podcast ❤️
estavam com saudades? pois agora voltamos, e voltamos com tudo! mudamos de nome e agora somos NotraCast, mas o formato leve e divertido continua o mesmo. nossa segunda temporada estreia com Roberta Freitas – ou Rob – beauty expert, criadora de conteúdo e empreendedora. nessa conversa, falamos sobre sua ascensão no mercado de luxo, como ela inspira e cria para suas seguidoras, e como ela administra suas finanças nesse mundo de influência digital. fale conosco: assessoria.notrabalho@gmail.com
Motion picture mold maker Rob Freitas details his journey of work on some of the biggest Hollywood blockbusters including his involvement in creating Ben Affleck's cowl for Zack Snyder's Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice.
This week's interview is with an old makeup effects pal of mine, master mold maker Rob Freitas! Rob has worked on TONS of amazing films and is regarded as one of the very best mold makers in the industry. We discuss: being a "monster kid", the influence of his grandfather, leaving Northern California to get into the FX biz, being mentored by Moto Hata, Working for Rob Bottin (on an all weekend gig), working for Rick Baker and much more! This was a really fun interview and I honestly forgot we were recording a few times- always a good indicator of great conversation. Also a quick art life update and new subscribers. Interview starts at around 7:51 Rob's Instagram: @rob_freitas_ The Dark Art Society Podcast is produced by Chet Zar. Become an Official Member of the Dark Art Society: www.patreon.com/DarkArtSociety Chet’s Patreon: www.patreon.com/ChetZar The Dark Art Society Instagram: instagram.com/darkartsociety Official Dark Art Society Website: www.darkartsociety.com The Dark Art Society Podcast is now available in a variety of places, including the following platforms: SoundCloud: @darkartsociety iTunes: apple.co/2gMNUfM Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/s?fid=134626&refid=stpr Podbay: podbay.fm/show/1215146981 YouTube: bit.ly/2nNYPre DarkArtSociety.com Copyright Chet Zar LLC 2019
Most people learn techniques and perfect them. Some people then take those techniques and look at what can be improved. Sangeet falls into this camp. He is now pretty well known for creating high quality prosthetic transfers, moulds made which contain the appliances and are used directly in their application. As far as I can ascertain, this system was developed by Conor O'Sullivan and Rob Trenton and involves making silicone mould inserts which contain the appliances during application, speeding up the process in the chair and allowing multiple appliances to be run from the same sculpt. Sangeet has taken this process and developed many techniques and methods to push it even further. The transfer technique involves a lot of moulding and remoulding, and is not for the faint of heart but the results can be fantastic. Check out his website studiosangeet.com/ and his range of anatomivcally accurate injury appliance flat moulds. I chatted with Sangeet in his home studio in North London, and we spent four hours talking about moulds, standing on the shoulders of giants, using old-school materials in new ways. We covered a number of topics, including: Parental influences, how you absorb things you see in your parents rather than were actively shown, especially seeing them at work and learning to problem solve. Using simple materials in a more effective way. Seth Godin – what is school for. (Video: STOP STEALING DREAMS: On the future of education & what we can do about it). Scott Sigler, horror author https://scottsigler.com/ Why simply knowing good techniques doesn’t make you a good artist. Art v Craft - Grayson Perry http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03969vt. (Grayson did a number of amazing lectures with the BBC called 'Playing to the Gallery'. I'd urge you to track them down to listen. ) Grayson Perry documentary 'All Man' : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvrC0i4pXak Howard Finster artist: http://www.finster.com/ The Falstaff inflatable makeup from 1911, from Popular Mechanics. (It actually used silk, not cotton as I said in the podcast). Mouldmakers – Carl Lyon (https://www.instagram.com/carllyonfx/), (http://vvdfx.com/) Rob Freitas (https://www.instagram.com/freighttrain_moldmaker/) and his interview with Gunnar Ferdinandsen: https://vimeo.com/68578907 Brian Best http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0078907/ Blender, free and open source 3D software: https://www.blender.org/ Artes Mechanicae https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artes_Mechanicae The baggage from deifying techniques. VFX and production are not living in the past, but looking forward. Langers Lines – directions of skin tension: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Langer%27s_lines Compare also with https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraissl%27s_lines and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaschko%27s_lines Newtonian Fluid: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newtonian_fluid 3M and material development. The benefits of a folio of failures. Overusing appliances rather than working with the face. Incredible prosthetic artist Floris Schuller http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0776047/ Acylic Polymers - Jesmonite, AcrylicOne, Forton MG I mentioned a plaster here in the UK called Alpha K. Dave Parvin, artist, who incidentally wrote a fantatsic series of articles collated in the book 'The Casting of Angels'. Check us out on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/stuartandtodd/ or email us direct at stuartandtodd@gmail.com! If you dig this, then share it! It would really help us out to grow the podcast. - Stuart & Todd
We would like to thank Rob Freitas for coming on SuperHouse! In this episode, we discuss his life as a moldmaker as well as his passion for Batman and what Matt Reeves should do for The Batman. Thank you, Rob! PATREON: www.patreon.com/superhousepodcast TWITTER: Twitter.com/SuperHousePod FACEBOOK: Facebook.com/SuperHousePodcast INSTAGRAM: www.instagram.com/superhousepodcast/ YOUTUBE: www.youtube.com/channel/UC_UKW-BczMpTc3hmLAUas-Q GMAIL: SuperHousePodcast@gmail.com JOEY’S TWITCH: https://www.twitch.tv/lonesword3
In part 2 of our discussion, Rob Freitas talks about the value of knowing about the unknowns. He sheds some light on the importance of knowing to look at what was before and honours great artists like Gil Liberto (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0508847/) who does incredible work for the likes of at Joel Harlow (Star Trek, anyone?). Check out this Vanity Fair article about the makeup work on Star Trek: http://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2017/02/star-trek-beyond-makeup. The blog post for this one is here: http://www.learnmakeupeffects.com/all-aboard-the-freit-train-part-2/ When going to trade shows and being asked to speak, Rob likes to share what he has known but he is there to be fed knowledge as well as to feed others. He doesn’t want to be the subject - rather he cares about the craft and wants you to care too. Thinking about provenance and what went before is a humbling way of uncovering the history of your subject matter, and is utterly fascinating. When you think about the makeups from the original Wizard Of Oz from 1939, the list of makeup crew reads like a who's who of the makeup industry - Jack Dawn, Max Factor, Cecil Holland, Robert Schiffer, William Tuttle, Charles Schram... Two more names that pop up are the perhaps little know Josef Norin (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0635364/?ref_=ttfc_fc_cr33) and his son Gustaf ('Gus') Norin (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0635362/?ref_=ttfc_fc_cr32) who were Swiss artists who brought their talents over from a background in sculpting and moulding small moulds for jewellery. Gustaf was father of John and Robert Norin, both makeup artists with an impressive line-up of screen credits. Another aspect we touch on is how many of us working can count on the lack of distractions we had from the internet. Whilst it is fair to say that the internet brings untold knowledge to our fingertips, it also means we need to learn how to focus and channel what is important, rather than allow meaningless information to steal our time away. Social media makes people aware of what others may think of them or their beliefs…this wasn't something we grew up with in the pre-internet age. It is certainly shaping how people learn, and it's important to identify what really matters so one can harness that information and power into a tangible benefit rather than an endless distraction. Rob mentions a number of artists work, and links are provided below: Jason Barnetts' awesome documentary of Charlie Gemora: Genius Monkeyman. You can rent/buy to watch it here: https://vimeo.com/ondemand/charliegemorauncredited/153530263 Gunnar Ferdinandsen (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0272256/) Some of his credits include: • Ghostbusters • Total Recall • The Thing • Legend Wizard of Oz makeup artists: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0032138/combined Gino Acevedo http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0009707/ https://vimeo.com/92782082 Sergei Koudriautsev http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1165713/ Thanks again for checking this out! If you enjoyed this podcast, please support us if you can by: Sharing the podcast on Social Media Subscribing to the podcast on iTunes or Stitcher Review us to let others know it's worth their time!
Rob Freitas is one of the best-known mould makers in the industry and has a phenomenal reputation. Not only is he incredibly skilled at making moulds but he has a passion for the provenance of the techniques which he uses and cares deeply to help interested parties understand so they can be better too. He also will redirect much of the attention he gets to his predecessors and those peers whom he feels deserve more attention. It's a very generous attitude which I believe is born out of an unabashed passion for the subject and a desire to fan those flames in others. It comes from a very pure place and it's not often you meet someone with that much knowledge, skill and wisdom and who also is phenomenally approachable and easy to talk to. He'll no doubt blush to read these words. We hooked up at a pub near the Millennium FX in Aylesbury where he was teaching a class that week, and a few of us slunk off to the lobby of Rob's hotel to talk bronze age axe heads, seamlines and technology. Full blog post here: http://www.learnmakeupeffects.com/all-aboard-the-freit-train-part-1/ Rob, me, Ivan Bellew and Nat Reynolds. Good times! The audio is clear, but there is some background noise owing to the nature of a public space. It was around 10pm when we started and we kept at it until around 0130…that's how interesting it was. Just a magical few hours and I'm really pleased we could synch schedules to be able to sit down and talk. In this first of two parts, we talk about Learning lessons through failure. The importance of looking at the past and knowing on whose shoulders we stand. Shortened timescales and managing expectations of people who seek to learn and gain skill (it is my belief the relatively short duration of courses as compared with time-served apprenticeships) can rob people of valuable lessons acquired through error and repetition). Caring about the right things in order to be better. Axe Heads and Allies The reason I brought that axe head was to show Rob the seams in it - evidence of moulds which have been used to make essential life sustaining tools and weapons. Moulds have been aroud for so long, and it gave me a bit of thrill to be able to have a modern day master mould maker touch a casting from an ancient mould and admire their handiwork 2500 years on. (Incidentally, this estimation is based on a bit of research I did into bronze age artefacts. This particular head is a palstave, check out http://www.antiques-info.co.uk/new/pdf/July02/1.pdf). The Videos We mention a couple of videos that are on YouTube which show skills at work - hand making globes from 1955 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RWcWSN4HhI) and a Disney video explaining the different types of rivet (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IDbTUt3OG9s). This was something Disney did to help the war effort, when training many civilians to make military equipment like aircraft required detailed explanations of manufacturing processes such as these. How better to explain these intricate and involved processes than with an animation, condensing time and showing materials in cross section. Look out for part 2 coming very soon, and subscribe to use on iTunes, Stitcher, iHeart Radio and Google Play Music to name but a few! Thanks, Stuart
On this episode, Frank and I talk with Master Mold Maker, Rob Freitas. Rob has been in the industry for decades and is considered by many best in his speciality - mold making. Let's put it this way: Rob is the guy that Rick Baker calls when he needs someone to make molds. It's a fascinating chat with one of the premiere mold makers in the business. Also, if you're enjoying this podcast and you want to hear more, please head over to http://www.patreon.com/creaturegeek and support us with a few bucks.