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 RenderingTons 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 CamelsYou 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.