Recycling animation
is one of the tricks of the trade though. All cool.
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 15:56, Share, Reply)
is one of the tricks of the trade though. All cool.
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 15:56, Share, Reply)
Isn't this recycling also a recycle? aka GC
Pretty sure it was posted up last week.
EDIT: oh, my bad, didn't see the "#2" or bother watching it.
What a load of #2.
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 16:10, Share, Reply)
Pretty sure it was posted up last week.
EDIT: oh, my bad, didn't see the "#2" or bother watching it.
What a load of #2.
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 16:10, Share, Reply)
How does this work exactly?
Do they have a bank of reference videos and just rotoscope over them?
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 18:24, Share, Reply)
Do they have a bank of reference videos and just rotoscope over them?
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 18:24, Share, Reply)
Maybe they have a stock of wireframe animations that they just paint the new character over?
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 18:41, Share, Reply)
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 18:41, Share, Reply)
Nah I don't think it's anything that complex
It would have been loads of extra work to produce clean skeletal animations for every scene in a film, on the off chance that they might be reused down the line. They either dug out the original animation cells and traced them, or more likely just rotoscoped frames from previous movies.
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 21:34, Share, Reply)
It would have been loads of extra work to produce clean skeletal animations for every scene in a film, on the off chance that they might be reused down the line. They either dug out the original animation cells and traced them, or more likely just rotoscoped frames from previous movies.
( , Wed 20 May 2015, 21:34, Share, Reply)