Morning Exercise Animations
- MatthewTardiff
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Morning Exercise Animations
A little morning exercise using my new favorite book, Action Analysis for Animators by Chris Webster.
On Page 111 he has a simplified version of a quad gallop. I recreated it in TvPaint this morning because one can never get enough exercise. The main focus of the simplified piece is to understand the torso mass and how it squashes and stretches in the gallop.
Last edited by MatthewTardiff on 09 May 2012, 18:48, edited 1 time in total.
- Paul Fierlinger
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Re: Morning Exercise
Clever.
BTW, are you left handed?
BTW, are you left handed?
Paul
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- MatthewTardiff
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- Paul Fierlinger
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Re: Morning Exercise
Maybe Chris Webster is. It just seems strange to me that you make the beast gallop from right to left.
Paul
http://www.slocumfilm.com
Desktop PC Win10-Pro -64 bit OS; 32.0 GB RAM
Processor: i7-2600 CPU@3.40GHz
AMD FirePro V7900; Intuos4 Wacom tablet
http://www.slocumfilm.com
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AMD FirePro V7900; Intuos4 Wacom tablet
- MatthewTardiff
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Re: Morning Exercise
I hadn't really though about it. I'm going to leap out on a limp and ask a stupid question, "Why is it strange that I would have it gallop right to left."Paul Fierlinger wrote:Maybe Chris Webster is. It just seems strange to me that you make the beast gallop from right to left.
- Klaus Hoefs
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Re: Morning Exercise
Interesting and helpful to watch. I really like those clips which are showing the whole process of ones's workflow.
(But, btw what happened to the jumping icon (middle right ) after 1:58 ???? )
(But, btw what happened to the jumping icon (middle right ) after 1:58 ???? )
- MatthewTardiff
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Re: Morning Exercise
That was my entourage email notification
- Paul Fierlinger
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Re: Morning Exercise
It was a silly question on second thought, sorry. I had just read that most people draw figures facing from left to right because of the writing convention, and that consequently in right to left writing cultures people draw characters facing left, as do left handed writers in our culture, so I thought here's an opportunity to check that theory out.MatthewTardiff wrote:I hadn't really though about it. I'm going to leap out on a limp and ask a stupid question, "Why is it strange that I would have it gallop right to left."Paul Fierlinger wrote:Maybe Chris Webster is. It just seems strange to me that you make the beast gallop from right to left.
Paul
http://www.slocumfilm.com
Desktop PC Win10-Pro -64 bit OS; 32.0 GB RAM
Processor: i7-2600 CPU@3.40GHz
AMD FirePro V7900; Intuos4 Wacom tablet
http://www.slocumfilm.com
Desktop PC Win10-Pro -64 bit OS; 32.0 GB RAM
Processor: i7-2600 CPU@3.40GHz
AMD FirePro V7900; Intuos4 Wacom tablet
- MatthewTardiff
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Re: Morning Exercise
ha. Gotcha. I wondered if it was something like that or dealing with the flow of action.
- Klaus Hoefs
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Re: Morning Exercise
To tell from design-theory "running from right to left" will never be so fast as "from left to right" (for our culture). I've read also that "right to left" has contra-productive effects and is anarchistic, is against all odds - all meant in a design meaning (?!).
- MatthewTardiff
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- Klaus Hoefs
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Re: Morning Exercise
Yes, all rules for the good students on the good schools...
- Paul Fierlinger
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Re: Morning Exercise
It has always been taught in script writing classes that a train moving left to right is going to its destinations, and right to left is returning. I once did some animation for Sesame Street in Arabic and this theory was confirmed to me by Arabic consultants in Jordan; that in the example of the train, the cultural convention would be the opposite of what it is for us, basically also derived from the direction of writing.
Paul
http://www.slocumfilm.com
Desktop PC Win10-Pro -64 bit OS; 32.0 GB RAM
Processor: i7-2600 CPU@3.40GHz
AMD FirePro V7900; Intuos4 Wacom tablet
http://www.slocumfilm.com
Desktop PC Win10-Pro -64 bit OS; 32.0 GB RAM
Processor: i7-2600 CPU@3.40GHz
AMD FirePro V7900; Intuos4 Wacom tablet
- MatthewTardiff
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- Klaus Hoefs
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Re: Morning Exercise
Yes, that's what I meant with "our culture".
Trains are interesting, as they (usually) can't leave their rails, in other words they have no "free will". I think that's why some books became successful as Ottfried Preußler's "Jim Knopf" (engl.: "Jim Button and Luke the Engine Driver" ) in which locomotive "Emma" can run free and also has own thoughts and will.
Trains are interesting, as they (usually) can't leave their rails, in other words they have no "free will". I think that's why some books became successful as Ottfried Preußler's "Jim Knopf" (engl.: "Jim Button and Luke the Engine Driver" ) in which locomotive "Emma" can run free and also has own thoughts and will.