by jeff
Maximum Joy is a motion design music video by Calvin and Ryan Sprague. Over six months, 3D worlds, hand-drawn frames, and color build a symbolic journey.
Directed by Calvin Sprague and Ryan Sprague for Mystery Skulls, Maximum Joy took six months to produce. The result blends illustration, 3D animation, and frame-by-frame drawing into one continuous visual statement. It stands out as a motion design project built through real experimentation rather than polish applied after the fact. The narrative follows desire, acceleration, and transformation, circling back to reframe forward movement as a cycle of pursuit and renewal.
The video is structured around forward momentum. Tunnels, portals, and accelerating transitions carry the viewer through shifting environments without pause. Color does the narrative heavy lifting. Soft gradients give way to saturated bursts and muted desert tones, each shift marking a change in emotional pitch. This kind of color-as-structure thinking is central to the motion design discipline, and Maximum Joy applies it frame by frame.
How Maximum Joy Combines 3D and Hand-Drawn Motion Design
Calvin Sprague handled 3D modeling, compositing, and overall direction. Ryan Sprague contributed frame-by-frame animation and typography. The hand-drawn sequences interrupt the digital precision of the 3D environments at key moments, introducing warmth and physical energy. Custom-built sets, from symbolic machines to a detailed command deck and expansive desert landscapes, give each sequence a distinct sense of place.
Early storyboards mapped pacing and symbolism before production began. Those sketches established the visual language that held through six months of tool-learning and iteration. The motion design work rewards close attention: color, rhythm, and environment each carry symbolic weight from the first frame to the last. Explore more from Calvin Sprague at calvinsprague.com.







