In an interview with Wired , the head of the Human Interface group Apple, Alan Dye, spoke about various design elements that were inserted into the Apple Watch software, smart watch company that will have its official launch later this month. He tells how the company managed to capture the movements and the difficulties encountered to enter as many details.
By default the company, the attention to detail has also been strengthened in every internal and external element of the watch. Dye praises all the care that the human interface group had to work with the Apple Watch, and tried to focus on nature to bring more real movements to animations, like blooming flowers, a butterfly and even a jellyfish moving. He says they used photographs and not CGI ( Common Gateway Interface , or “computer-generated” in free translation).
We shot it all [...], the butterflies and the running water and flowers for the movements, it’s all on camera. We saw how the flowers were blossoming over time. In all, it took 285 hours and captured more than 24,000 images.
He also points out that for the inserted elements common users seem simple in their final versions, but stresses that the effort to include all these elements was hard for the team – even the symbols for fitness analysis of Apple Watch . He says that all the work of the icons are the result of a full year of work of the design team.
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