This is hopefully the beginning of a freelance project.
I did 8 drawings on paper, then scanned, re-timed, in-betweened, inked, and colored in TVPaint.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tldMlhFxS5g
Enjoy!!!!
David.
A little splashy turtle.
- toonsisters
- Posts: 105
- Joined: 11 Jan 2008, 13:38
- Location: Germany
- Peter Wassink
- Posts: 4436
- Joined: 17 Feb 2006, 15:38
- Location: Amsterdam
- Contact:
Revision
Alright, alright. I inked and cleaned it.
I'd like to hear from anyone who does clean 2d animation entirely in TVPaint--my process was pretty slow for this and definitely needs suggestions. I had about eight layers -- first, the initial 8 drawings on paper, timed out with holds. Then, a blue pencil layer done in tvpaint, all 24 frames, rough animation. Then I (needlessly) spread the inking across several layers, and finally slid the color underneath.
I discovered that the blue needs to be well constructed if the inking is going to go quickly. I had to construct those morphy feet in the inking stage.
I'm doing nine more animals in this style, for the freelance project.
David
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWC_e3ZU22M
I'd like to hear from anyone who does clean 2d animation entirely in TVPaint--my process was pretty slow for this and definitely needs suggestions. I had about eight layers -- first, the initial 8 drawings on paper, timed out with holds. Then, a blue pencil layer done in tvpaint, all 24 frames, rough animation. Then I (needlessly) spread the inking across several layers, and finally slid the color underneath.
I discovered that the blue needs to be well constructed if the inking is going to go quickly. I had to construct those morphy feet in the inking stage.
I'm doing nine more animals in this style, for the freelance project.
David
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWC_e3ZU22M
- Peter Wassink
- Posts: 4436
- Joined: 17 Feb 2006, 15:38
- Location: Amsterdam
- Contact:
inking could be done on one layer indeed.
a feature that might help you during cleaning is to open open a secondary project window ( short cut 'm' ), now set one window at 100% magnification this is so you can see how your ink-line will look in the end result,
you can use the other window to do the actual drawing and zoom in on the part you are cleaning.
a comment on your cleaned turtle.
When its head moves back to the begin position it loses volume and shape, it looks very morphed there.
a feature that might help you during cleaning is to open open a secondary project window ( short cut 'm' ), now set one window at 100% magnification this is so you can see how your ink-line will look in the end result,
you can use the other window to do the actual drawing and zoom in on the part you are cleaning.
a comment on your cleaned turtle.
When its head moves back to the begin position it loses volume and shape, it looks very morphed there.
Peter Wassink - 2D animator
• PC: Win11/64 Pro - AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-Core - 64Gb RAM
• laptop: Win10/64 Pro - i7-4600@2.1 GHz - 16Gb RAM
• PC: Win11/64 Pro - AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-Core - 64Gb RAM
• laptop: Win10/64 Pro - i7-4600@2.1 GHz - 16Gb RAM
Thanks for the inking tip. I knew about the "m" key but I never thought to use it for inking. Seems obvious now.
I cleaned it up further, and actually reshaped the head, since the client said it was too "alien-like."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyICG9jXoec
It got distorted because I didn't anticipate youtube rescaling it like that....
I cleaned it up further, and actually reshaped the head, since the client said it was too "alien-like."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyICG9jXoec
It got distorted because I didn't anticipate youtube rescaling it like that....