Been using Anime Studio Pro as a professional since back in the Moho days. -Seems it was a little better at exporting .swf files back then. Here's a direct link to my ASP stuff:
http://www.scottstrongmedia.com/Charact ... ation.html
2 of the movies there were paid, the others were tests in the hopes that ASP could be put into a workflow. I have some more professional work that I need to compile into something more reel-like.
...and then there's that project that's ALMOST done, which I'm itching to show everyone but I also want to show it once it's finished! Perhaps if you twist my arm enough....
"Real World" Anime Studio projects
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- digitalartguru
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I've also made some shorts for a local TV show:
http://youtu.be/uKUYXMBGsX0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cF3QVAxfCyM
http://youtu.be/uKUYXMBGsX0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cF3QVAxfCyM
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- Posts: 279
- Joined: Thu Mar 30, 2006 6:12 pm
- Location: Verona, New Jersey
Thanks, digitalartguru!
Back in the Kablam days, we were working in a room over our boss' garage. That was in '95/'96. Flash didn't really have a foothold back then. So, the animation was drawn by hand on paper, then scanned in and colored in Photoshop. Then we used Macromedia's Director (does that even exist anymore?) as a exposure sheet tool to time the animation. Then the animation was brought into After Effects to marry it to the background and to add other effects, wherever they were needed. The result of that was brought into an editing suite and then shipped to Nickelodeon.
I recently finished up some animation for Sesame Workshop which was animated in ASP. I think I'd get in trouble for posting that right now. Maybe in a year or two.
Back in the Kablam days, we were working in a room over our boss' garage. That was in '95/'96. Flash didn't really have a foothold back then. So, the animation was drawn by hand on paper, then scanned in and colored in Photoshop. Then we used Macromedia's Director (does that even exist anymore?) as a exposure sheet tool to time the animation. Then the animation was brought into After Effects to marry it to the background and to add other effects, wherever they were needed. The result of that was brought into an editing suite and then shipped to Nickelodeon.
I recently finished up some animation for Sesame Workshop which was animated in ASP. I think I'd get in trouble for posting that right now. Maybe in a year or two.