The final version of the Tooth Palace is tucked away deep inside a mountain reminiscent of China’s Huangshan, which is often bathed in yellow and pink light at sunrise. The soft salmon colors of the environment provide a background the makes the greens and purples of Tooth and the Mini Fairies come to vivid life
The resplendent home go the Tooth Fairy is a cavernous chamber decorated with stalactite-like structures that resemble upside-down versions of the Sri Meenakshi Temple inn Maduri, India. Thai warm, salmon-colored realm was designed foremost as a vertically oriented space—an ideal place for the flying Tooth Fairy to store her incredible collection of baby teeth. But this archive needed also to function as a believable home for the Tooth Fairy and her army of little Teeth helpers
--a space “built for birds by birds,” according to production designer Patring Hananberger.
“Everything about the Tooth Palace needed to have a function, but it also had to be a place that birds or bird like creatures could inhabit in a natural way.” Continues Hanenberger. “So there are no doors, no floors or kitchens. Everywhere you look, you notice thing that remind you of a bird’s nest. Even the platforms on which the Guardians stand in one scene are located on the edge of a nest.”
The inspiration for the overall concept of Tooth’s palace came from a trip Hanenberger took to Thailand in the spring of 2008. “I was struck by the bird’s-nest climbers who venture daily inside caves along southwest Thailand.” he says. “took a lot of photos and later went on to use them as reference point for the interiors of the Tooth Palace. We really wanted to bring real-world echoes to this magical place. It’s imported to give the audience seventy-five percent believability and twenty-five percent magic.”
The mosaics that adorn the walls of the palace hint at other actual and magical antecedents for Tooth. They Tooth’s heritage in an array of international motifs that correspond to the cultures and continents where the vignettes take palace. Although the movie doesn’t delve into the fairy’s parentage, some of the images hint at a romantic love between an Indian maharaja and a magical bird.
Normally, when the memories are in place, the palace is abuzz with activity, Little Teeth zip around the towers and the cavernous interiors at breakneck paces, allowing for great opportunities to explore the various corners of this enchanting place in stereoscopic 3D. Using previsualization and camera capture technologies, the designers were able to select the best angles and place the virtual “camera” in a way that will allow audiences to experience the breadth and depth of this realm as the Mini Fairies flutter around the main characters. Thanks to the efforts of lead designer Stan Seo and surfacing supervisor Andy Harbeck, the unique look of the Tooth Palace is one that truly transfers the audience to a shimmering world unique to this movie.
The final version of the Tooth Palace is tucked away deep inside a mountain reminiscent of China’s Huangshan, which is often bathed in yellow and pink light at sunrise. The soft salmon colors of the environment provide a background the makes the greens and purples of Tooth and the Mini Fairies come to vivid lifeThe resplendent home go the Tooth Fairy is a cavernous chamber decorated with stalactite-like structures that resemble upside-down versions of the Sri Meenakshi Temple inn Maduri, India. Thai warm, salmon-colored realm was designed foremost as a vertically oriented space—an ideal place for the flying Tooth Fairy to store her incredible collection of baby teeth. But this archive needed also to function as a believable home for the Tooth Fairy and her army of little Teeth helpers--a space “built for birds by birds,” according to production designer Patring Hananberger.“Everything about the Tooth Palace needed to have a function, but it also had to be a place that birds or bird like creatures could inhabit in a natural way.” Continues Hanenberger. “So there are no doors, no floors or kitchens. Everywhere you look, you notice thing that remind you of a bird’s nest. Even the platforms on which the Guardians stand in one scene are located on the edge of a nest.”The inspiration for the overall concept of Tooth’s palace came from a trip Hanenberger took to Thailand in the spring of 2008. “I was struck by the bird’s-nest climbers who venture daily inside caves along southwest Thailand.” he says. “took a lot of photos and later went on to use them as reference point for the interiors of the Tooth Palace. We really wanted to bring real-world echoes to this magical place. It’s imported to give the audience seventy-five percent believability and twenty-five percent magic.”The mosaics that adorn the walls of the palace hint at other actual and magical antecedents for Tooth. They Tooth’s heritage in an array of international motifs that correspond to the cultures and continents where the vignettes take palace. Although the movie doesn’t delve into the fairy’s parentage, some of the images hint at a romantic love between an Indian maharaja and a magical bird. Normally, when the memories are in place, the palace is abuzz with activity, Little Teeth zip around the towers and the cavernous interiors at breakneck paces, allowing for great opportunities to explore the various corners of this enchanting place in stereoscopic 3D. Using previsualization and camera capture technologies, the designers were able to select the best angles and place the virtual “camera” in a way that will allow audiences to experience the breadth and depth of this realm as the Mini Fairies flutter around the main characters. Thanks to the efforts of lead designer Stan Seo and surfacing supervisor Andy Harbeck, the unique look of the Tooth Palace is one that truly transfers the audience to a shimmering world unique to this movie.
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