![Razz :P](./images/smilies/icon_razz.gif)
Anyway, the result is still gorgeous and I can't wait to test the game this week-end
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
I find this frequently with some of my students and even some professionals I know. Using Photoshop to do everything is so deeply ingrained in them, they will tell me they draw their animation in TVPaint (or animate on paper , then scan the drawings to TVPaint for line testing ) , but then for coloring they export all drawings to Photoshop for coloring , then composite their colored animation drawings with the background (painted in Photoshop, not TVPaint
My teacher drew animation for the game "The act" ))D.T. Nethery wrote: ↑23 Sep 2017, 17:39I remember this one from a few years ago:
https://www.tvpaint.com/v2/content/arti ... h%20Studio
This was animated in TVPaint:
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I first found TVPaint through a game studio although we didn't use TVPaint for the game I worked on, but we might have if things had turned out differently. I worked as the Artistic Coordinator and Head of Clean-Up on an arcade game called "The Act" , which was animated traditionally with pencil on paper , scanned the drawings into ANIMO , color and compositing in ANIMO. We were looking to make the next installment all paperless , so were testing out different systems: Flash , Toonboom, and Mirage (aka TVPaint v.7) The one that made the best impression on me was Mirage . If we had continued I think we would have used Mirage/TVPaint . I bought my own personal copy of it to use at home as well as at work ... unfortunately the studio closed not long after that and we never made another installment of the game. That was in 2006 . Before then I was a total traditional pencil and paper animator , had never touched a computer to do artwork (not counting digital ink & paint and compositing in ANIMO) , but I mean to do actual drawing , painting , and animating with a tablet in a digital program.
http://theactgame.com/
(Several years after the game studio, Cecropia Games, closed , "The Act" was purchased by a different company and re-packaged to play on iPad.
So that is why the copyright notice on the video above says "2012" ... we started R & D on the "The Act" in 2004 , most of the production was done from late 2004 - to - mid- 2006 most of the animation staff was laid off at that point ... a handful of us were kept on through the end of 2006 to work on development . That's when I was introduced to Mirage/TVPaint as I was attempting to come up with a paperless pipeline for the next game.)
Is your teacher Sasha Dorogov ? I'm going to be talking with him on Skype tomorrow ! He is a great animator and a great teacher of animation.