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Luxo Jr. is a semi-anthropomorphic toy desk lamp character used as the primary mascot of Pixar Animation Studios. He is the protagonist of the short film Luxo Jr. and appears on the production logo of every Pixar film, hopping into view and jumping on the capital letter "I" in "PIXAR" to flatten it ever since 1995.
Pixar lamp intro from pixar movies HD 720p. ferangelini. 1.52K subscribers. Subscribed. 14K. 3M views 13 years ago.
Luxo Jr. is a 1986 American animated short film produced and released by Pixar. [2] . Written and directed by John Lasseter, the two-minute short film revolves around one larger and one smaller desk lamp.
Luxo, Jr. is both Pixar's mascot and the titular protagonist of the 1986 short film of the same name. He is a small, sentient, light gray desk lamp (although he has sometimes looked more white than light gray) who loves to play with bouncy balls.
Pixar has paid tribute to its origins in every one of its movies through the iconic lamp, and the reasons are tied to a groundbreaking moment in animation.
A baby lamp finds a ball to play with and it's all fun and games until the ball bursts. Just when the elder Luxo thinks his kid will settle down for a bit, Luxo Jr. finds another ball—ten times larger.
Luxo, Jr. is Pixar's mascot and the star of the 1986 short film of the same name. He is a small, light gray desk lamp (although he has sometimes looked more white than light gray) who loves to play with bouncy balls.
The Pixar logo and the hopping desk lamp. “In 1986 Pixar produced its first film. This is why we have a hopping lamp in our logo.”. Based in Emeryville, California, just across the Bay Bridge from San Francisco, the American animation studio came to life in 1979 when George Lucas recruited Ed Catmull from the New York Institute of ...
When this cleverly functional task light was chosen as the Pixar mascot, it became instantly iconic – and controversial. In 1937, Norway’s Jac Jacobsen designed the award-winning Luxo L-1 lamp, an industrial task light. But in 1986, CGI animation studio Pixar gave it a second life as a cartoon.
It’s a desk lamp. For more than twenty-five years, it has served as the symbol for one of the pioneering companies in the field of computer animation, Pixar, and it all started with the fascination held for a lamp on John Lasseter’s desk.