Thursday, December 21, 2006

More baby steps...



A variation on the baby steps of yesterday.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Baby's first steps



This is a piece of walk animation I did.

Monday, December 18, 2006

Bird animation

I've been busy creating scripts for Anime Studio. But a little bit of animation never hurts.

Saturday, December 09, 2006

Another cartoon guy

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I'm getting pretty good at animating in Flash. Not as good as I want to, but I'm in the right direction. If you hadn't noticed, the image is animated; he yawns every 30 seconds.

Cartoon guy

Well, I think this drawing wasn't too bad. It isn't good either. I started drawing in Flash 2.0 and colored the drawing in Moho 5.3.

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Friday, December 08, 2006

Bunny logo

bunny logo

I took the plunge and drew this bunny in Flash 2.0. It's not very pretty, but it is animated.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Combining Flash and Moho

I wanted to know if it is possible to create some frames in Flash 2.0 and use those as image frames in Moho. Here is a result.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Fireman

Had a little fun drawing in Flash 2.0

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More Flash animation

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I created the blob in Flash and adding the eyes in Moho. No too bad, I would like to say.

My first Flash animation

I found my copy of Flash 2.0 to have an installer for Mac OS (I bought it for Windows 98SE), and tried some basic animation. Wow, that's really hard.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Character for the animation contest

Well, it took me a lot of time and I missed some sleep, but my character for the animation contest is finished. As usual, I had made it all too complicated (probably because I wanted to make it too perfect), and then simplified matters. I'm just not experienced enough to have a good workflow.

Here is my character doing a pirouette.



Notice that his arms are not balanced. The arm that is up, should be down, and vice versa.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Entered animation contest!

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usOn Animationforum.net there is a monthly animation contest running and anyone can enter (see here for more details). The character on the right is a test drawing. I have to go into the details, using some of the animation books I have, because a nice drawing doesn't make a cartoon character. The plot is to have several of these legged balls dancing around on the music supplied by the contest organizer.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Hand drawn blob



Well, the blob is hand drawn. The eyes are constructed.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Spongethingie



Well, it isn't anything like the real character, but it was a lot of fun creating this guy.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Another sprinting stick figure

Here's another attempt of animating a starting sprinter.

How about a talking head?

I was playing a bit with my animation program, Anime Studio Pro, and because I seem to be into heads lately, I decided to create an animation of a talking head. I pulled the audio file from the Net (just Google "movie quotes audio"). Alas, the YouTube video compressor removed some of the fun details. You can watch the file I compressed myself here.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Start to run

Well, here is a line test of an animation about running. Perhaps I should develop it in to a weird running animation of a stick figure.

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Just some doodling...

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usWell, knowing something about drawing faces seems to pay off after a few days. The knowledge has to sink in a bit before something useful surfaces.

It's not a great drawing (it's doodling), but much better than what I could have drawn a few weeks ago. Maybe now all I have to do is to study the subject more thoroughly...

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Shades of gray

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usI was trying to create an image of a tennis ball in shades of gray. First I put the tennis ball on a sheet of drawing paper and shaded the shadows the ball casted. Then I removed the ball, and shaded the details of the ball
Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usHere is the drawing, with some test drawing of shades of gray.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Drawing a face

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usAs was to be expected, my first drawing of a face is not very convincing. What I'm clearly lacking is experience and knowledge. I hope by doing it more often, I will get better. In the center you can see my pathetic attempt to copy a drawing of a face (top right corner). Nevertheless, I see a couple things I can improve immediately: draw more cautious (less pressure on the pencil), and try to measure the basic shape from the original (not proceed until that is correct).

I promise to get better, much better, than this.

(Note to self: drawing life images would be a very humbling experience right now, perhaps I should stick to self portraits until I'm better at this)

Sunday, November 05, 2006

More drawing

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usI keep drawing circles, squares and pentagons. I tried to draw some real life objects as well. Not yet as a study, but only as a doodle.

I'm really eager to start using the books about drawing (The Joy of Drawing, by Bill Martin), anatomy (Human Anatomy Made Amazingly Easy, by Christopher Hart, translated into Dutch), and cartoon drawing (Cartoon Animation, by Preston Blair, translated into Dutch). I think I'm ready for that now.

Friday, November 03, 2006

Another attempt at blinking eyes



Here is a better animation example. Thanks to the guys in the Anime Studio Forum for their advice and support.

Blinking

Does it matter how your character blinks its eys: eye slow of fast shutting, slow or fast opening?



A good excuse for animating. This time with Anime Studio Pro 5.5.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Some real improvement

When I compare what I draw today and twelve days ago, I'm seeing some real improvement. Not only do I take more time to draw, the pencil strokes are also more deliberate and exact.

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October 21, 2006November 2, 2006

I wonder what happens if I try to draw from Preston Blair's book about drawing animation, and from a book on drawing human anatomy? Who now claims that for some people it is impossible to learn how to draw, is either someone who doesn't know or someone who is telling lies. I'm was in the first category, but now I'm in neither.

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Leaf animation



It's fall (autumn) and the leafs give us inspiration to create animation.

I used the animation program Moho, ArtRage 2, the free image editor The Gimp, DivX converter to create this test animation on my Mac.

Monday, October 30, 2006

Drawing a pentagon

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usIf you can draw a circle and you can draw a square, you can draw an equilateral pentagon. How? Well, the first thing you have to realize is that all sides have equal length and all the angles in the equilateral pentagon are the same. If we turn the drawing so, that one of the sides of the pentagon is horizontal, we call that side the base side. The two adjacent sides have an angle that is less sharp than in case of a square, so they point—so to speak—outwards. The two other sides that are further away from the base side, point inwards and close the pentagon, by joining just above the center of the base side. If you turn the pentagon over one fifth of a full turn in the drawing plane, the next side becomes the base side, and the same relationships apply to its closest two neighbor sides and the remaining two sides. You can check this by turning your drawing and adjust until it looks right from all five sides.

Of course, this takes a lot of time, so the next step is to do this without physically turning the drawing, but, instead, doing this in your mind's eye. This exercise will learn you to see proportions. You can check if you drew a perfect pentagon with the method described earlier.

In fact, this is the way I draw my squares now. Making the angles straight (perpendicular) and all sides equal in length in my mind's eye, and then checking if the proportions are correct by turning the drawing in the drawing plane. This is a simple exercise to get a feeling for proportions. Drawing a pentagon is just a little more complicated, and will fine-tune your feeling for proportions even more.

A circle is a bit more complicated than a square, but not as complicated as a pentagon. If you draw the top, bottom and side points of the circle, drawing a circle is so much easier. Of course, you should always check before drawing the circle, if those four points are drawn at the proper positions. Are the imaginary line piece connecting the top and bottom points and the imaginary line piece connecting the left and right points perpendicular to each other, and do they have a common center point? These are some of the tricks I discovered while drawing squares and circles.

Drawing and learning how to draw is doing several things simultaneously. I have started to read a copy of the book "The Joy of Drawing" by Bill Martin (ISBN 0-8230-2370-2). The first chapter has some great tips on what to draw with and what different ways there are to hold a pencil, and what's its use in drawing. The chapter deals with other useful things for beginners as well. I will not repeat those things, and leave it entirely up to you to buy the book or not. You might have a look at Amazon for book reviews to help you decide.

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Headturn



For this headturn I needed to draw only 3 images, and could 2 other images by mirroring. Nevertheless, it took quite a lot time to make.

Having a little fun with Artrage 2


Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usI made this doodle of a cartoon head in Artrage 2. Nothing fancy, but fun to play with. I wanted to blow it up to a full size drawing. I clipped it to size in my image editor (using an exported PNG image) and used that as a tracing image in Artrage 2.
Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usThe result was this nice cartoon drawing. Nothing fancy, but a lot of fun doing it. And that is the point. Sometimes you just have to have some fun drawing, with nothing on your mind and without trying to create a "quality drawing".

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Drawing more squares

My squares are getting better by the day...



I'm setting up a new video rig, with the camera hanging over the workspace. The lighting is not good yet, but I'll buy some wall spots soon to get perfect lighting.

Friday, October 27, 2006

Drawing a circle in Artrage 2



Drawing a circle isn't easy. The trick seems to be to keep rotating the canvas until the circle looks proportionally about right.

The screen was captured on a Mac using Snapz Pro X 2 in the evaluation period. I used Artrage 2 and a Wacom Intuos 3 (6x8) digitizer tablet.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Drawing a square



As you might have realized by watching the video, I'm not very good at drawing. However, with some tricks it is possible to draw a square (well sort of). Often, if I draw my squares without measuring, they are either too wide or too narrow. I guess practice makes perfect.

Another way of checking is to keep turning the drawing 90 degrees (a quarter of a full turn) and back in the same plane as the drawing, and visually inspect if all sides are equal in length. Alas, my current video setup doesn't allow me to take shots from above. I'm looking for a better video setup, but for now I settle for a tripod and placing a sketchbook vertically on a table against the wall.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Cartoony drawing

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usThis is my first shot at cartoons after I started drawing circles. Not too bad. I have the book by Preston Blair about cartoon drawing (translated version). Perhaps I should try some examples from that book.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Drawing something more complicated

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usHere is an attempt to draw something more complicated. It was a four layered drawing in ArtRage 2, from bottom to top: background color, "texture"e; of the background, color of object, drawing of object. This drawing was from memory. It is actually a desk lamp, without the lamp holder.

Sunday, October 22, 2006

Digital versus analogue drawing

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usDrawing on a sheet of paper is definitely different from drawing with a stylus on an art tablet and a computer screen. There is no direct connection with the computer, compared to the pencil and paper, only an indirect connection. Your brain has to make the translation. So you have to get used to this type of drawing.

The advantage is that you have suddenly an enormous wealth of media at your disposal. Okay, it's not as cheap as paper and pencil, afterall, you need a computer, an art tablet and a natural media drawing program, but the advantages outway the disadvantages. I can understand why so many artist go digital.

You've probably noticed that I've started drawing squares as well and filled some of the shapes with color. I think I have improved much from yesterday's drawing, but I still have a lot of practicing to do before I start drawing objects, using simple shapes to construct those images.

That's all for now, see you later!

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Circles, circles, circles

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usWow, I wasn't aware that drawing a circle is so difficult!

I was using ArtRage 2, by Ambient Design, and a Wacom Intuos 3 graphic tablet, so I could show you some of my circles. I'm right-handed and some of the circles are drawn clockwise and some counterclockwise, and a few are drawn with my left hand. The Intuos 3 and ArtRage 2 are a good combination for drawing natural media.

It's obvious that I still need a lot of practice, both with pencil and paper, and stylus and artpad.

Bye and until next time.

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The humble beginning

I want to be able to draw animation, but I can't draw. I'm sure that question gets asked more than often. And in my case this particular same question keeps popping up in my head. I like to watch animation, although I'm older than 40. I like it so much, I want to do it myself. Not as a career, but just to entertain myself.

But where to begin?

It is obvious that if you can't draw, there is no point in trying to animate, at least, not the cartoon animation I want to draw. After some searching on the Net, I found this little site:



Lesson one tries to explain that drawing is actually seeing thing in basic shapes and construct those shapes into the form you want to draw. That seems obvious. If something is complicated, just make it simpler, less complicated. So, no surprises there.

Lesson two tells you before you can construct the complex form out of basic shapes, you'll need to be able to draw these simple shapes:

  • circle (which is a ball in three dimensions)
  • square (which is a cube in three dimensions)
  • triangle (which can be a pyramid or a cone in three dimensions)
  • cylinder (wich is a cross between a circle and a rectangle)


Now the author of the site tells something important he learned in artschool. When you want to be able to draw complex shapes, you should first be able to draw simple shapes. If you're not able to draw simple shapes, there is no point in drawing the complex ones.

Here's the exercise he gives his online pupils:

Beginners should practice drawing these simple shapes daily. Start out with the circles- draw big ones, small ones, circles within circles, fill up the entire page and most importantly- stay loose and IN CONTROL! Once you feel comfortable with circles, move onto the next shape- like a square or box. Take your time in learning these shapes- if you can't draw simple shapes, then there's no point in moving on! Once you feel condfident that you can draw any shape at ease, try constructing ordinary household items, like a TV, or a chair, a table, computer, radio, etc. Remembe- sometimes you have to go back to the basics just to move ahead!


If we see past the spelling errors (perhaps the author is dyslectic), this is actually very good advice, which I haven't seen in any of the drawing books (perhaps it was in there, and I simply read over it). So that's just what I will be doing... drawing circles until I drop, and then some more...

Bye, until next time.