hi
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hi
is there any on can help me in animation animales
- Víctor Paredes
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- Posts: 4
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thank you
1 - yes if you can help me to do and make adog move
2- how i can make bird fly
2- how i can make bird fly
Last edited by Egyptian Pharaoh on Tue Aug 21, 2007 6:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Do the tutorials. Draw a dog and a bird. Put them in a bone layer, add some bones. Try to animate them yourself first then come back here and ask for specific tips. At least we will know you made an effort.1 - yes if you can help me to do and make adog move
2- how i can make bird fly
You have internet access obviously, find a free hosting service and post results to go with your questions.
Asking such a general question is just plain silly. There is no answer to this question. ALL the answers on the ENTIRE FORUM could fit this question. Every single animation skill, concept, technique and skill is covered in this question.
Show some small tiny effort at least. Animation is hard work. If this is the limit of your ability to learn it than it's already a lost cause.
-vern
I wouldn't say that; doing animal walk cycles can be pretty tough depending on the animal.heyvern wrote:Asking such a general question is just plain silly. There is no answer to this question.
Presuming you already know how to draw and do basic animation, I highly recommend the book "Tezuka School of Animation 2: Animals in Motion" (Google it or check a bookstore). It has references for dog walk and run cycles from almost every angle imaginable (including turns!), flight cycles for various types of birds, and other movement cycles for things as obscure as giraffes, vipers and seahorses.
Some other resources:
For realistic movement, try to get a copy of "How Animals Move" by Focus Multimedia.
For more cartoon movement, get a copy of "Character Animation in 3D: : Use traditional drawing techniques ..." by Steve Roberts. Although the title says "3D", there are lots of 2D examples in the book - he recommends animating in 2D first to get a basis for better 3D animation.
To think about the bones, you can consider a realistic dog anatomy as something like a human walking on their fingers and toes.
From Steve Robert's book, a more cartoon-like dog's legs can also be animated like the legs of an old pantomime horse costume, or as 2 kids playing "wheelbarrow".
Regards, Myles
For realistic movement, try to get a copy of "How Animals Move" by Focus Multimedia.
For more cartoon movement, get a copy of "Character Animation in 3D: : Use traditional drawing techniques ..." by Steve Roberts. Although the title says "3D", there are lots of 2D examples in the book - he recommends animating in 2D first to get a basis for better 3D animation.
To think about the bones, you can consider a realistic dog anatomy as something like a human walking on their fingers and toes.
From Steve Robert's book, a more cartoon-like dog's legs can also be animated like the legs of an old pantomime horse costume, or as 2 kids playing "wheelbarrow".
Regards, Myles
"Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted."
-- Groucho Marx
-- Groucho Marx