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Thursday, March 20, 2008

Animation in exaggerated form

Head over to Mike Nguyen's blog (via Cartoon Brew) and check out his post on exaggerated animation:

This physics is a reflection and take roots from the real-world based on our human experiences; this reflection does not follow exact step-for-steps of the real, but requires a reinterpretation from the artist.


There's a great little 2D animation clip and another piece on his July Films Inc. site. There's just something about 2D that 3D doesn't have for me. Although that Ice Age 3 trailer in front of Horton was awesome. :)

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Horton Hears a Who - CG Society article

Head over to CG Society for the "Production Focus" article on Horton.

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Analysis of a shot


The beauty of the web. So much information out there!!
Looks like more and more posts about a shot analysis pop up, love it! This time it's Alex Woo's post "Analysisof a Shot - All the President's Men". Speaking of which, I'm a bit behind with my movie updates. There's been an accident within my family, so critiques and long posts have been on the back burner.

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Walkcycles


Yep, just like bouncing balls, a walk cycle is an exercise you should master. They look easy but are hard as hell. Head over to Stephen Gregory's class blog for his walk cycle post.

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Daphne's new broom

Great short by Ales Mav. You know, every now and then I think about doing a short, but then I see the quality of the models, the environment, the renders, the sounds, etc. and I feel old. :)
I think a playblast with Milt is more my level! :)
Check out the frogs at around 1min 20sec. I love how the one on the water and how he floats to the left and the frog at the end of the short.



- found @ bobbyboom.blogspot

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Facial Expressions and Milt Kahl

Carlos Baena has two awesome posts on his site. First one about facial expressions, using the Seinfeld show as an example. Lots of great screen captures and important notes. I really want to highlight the first point of his:

Just because your character is upset or angry, doesn't mean that you should have an upset or angry expression. Sometimes a character that's so upset or sad that can't even handle their feelings, they display emotions through laughter or smile.

That's so true!

Next one is a humongous collection of Milt Kahl movies, notes, recordings, drawings, etc.

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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

The Art of Disney Animation Blog

Cooked Art points to "The Art of Disney Animation", which has TONS of really cool images and photos.

You'll get to see "Alice", "101 Dalmatians", "Ratatouille", "Robin Hood", "Aladdin", you also get info about Eric Larson, Wolfgang Reitherman, etc. etc.

Make sure to click on "Page suivante" (next page), and then pages 2 and 3 for a lot more.





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Interview with Andreas Deja

ultimatedisney got a good interview with animation legend Andreas Deja.

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Monday, March 17, 2008

Horton Hears a Who - Shot Progression by Jeff Gabor

UPDATE: Site is open again and you can watch the movie clip. GOOD STUFF! HOLY MOLY!



I don't know how he's allowed to post that before the DVD release, but according to Jeff Gabor, check back in a week or two for the clip. - found @ 3dtotal


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Stumbled onto tons of links

Every now and then I check the stats of this site and this time followed a link to someone called "Arien". He had a list of useful links on "Stumble!" and here they are:

Tutorials and Technical Information for 3D Modeling, Animation Setup, and Rendering

Tons of stuff about the trax editor, FK-IK Spine setup, Blendshapes, Footrolls, Gimble Lock, then links about Cloth, Rendereing, Texturing, etc.

Another was for abhimation.blogspot and the post "Dialogue Clips to Animate" has a good list of audio clips.

This next one is awesome. I thought I posted about it a while ago, but it's worth a repost. It's the Art Tutorial page of itchstudios.










Then there is this silhouette image from uxmatters by Kevin Cheng.


The next one cracked me because I'm so rarely sketching things out (because I SUCK big time), and then I see these elaborate renders for a bouncing ball assignment (courtesy of Kid-Mesh @ CGsociety)



Then you got this massive Maya Video Tutorial site. You have among others:
- Illustrator to Maya
- Blendshape controls
- Maya 3D Piston
- Mental Ray
- Suspension Rig
- Modeling Tutorials

etc. etc.

Another thing was an animation blinklist (?). Worth a look, you never know.

Next one is a classic site. I remember checking it out while I was a student. It's about walk cycles courtesy of Thinking Animation. Head over there for a cool example list of different walk attitudes.

Next one is another Maya tutorial list on 3d-tutorial.com. You got stuff like Animation Layers, Rigging examples, etc.

Next one is the "Things They Don't Teach in Art School #5" post @ Temple of the Seven Golden Camels
You should visit that site no matter what.


Next up is "Animation Critique". I haven't registered yet, but could be good. If you're unsure about your clip, the more eyes the better.


Then you have animationresourcecentre, which has tons of links to animation shorts. One of them being "Zoudov". Even though I wish the animation was more polished, I love the feel of it (the John Barry music helps a lot, classic).


Lastly, talino.org has a nice little tutorial section for Maya.

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