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Animation F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 13 3:03 pm)
Characters, motion graphics, props, particles... everything that moves!
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Animation learning and resources:
11 Second Club: Monthly character animation competition.
Animation Mentor: Online school. Learn from the animation masters.
Rigging 101: Maya rigs and rigging tutorials.
AnimWatch: Showcasting the best of independent animation.
FlashKit: The best place to learn Flash.
Armaverse: Stop-motion armatures for animation.
60+ great Character Animator's sites: Get inspired.
Hi Folks! Darkhound, if you want a cleaner bluescreen (or any other screen) effect, you might want to invest in Adobe After Effects. One of my favorite tools is the Color-Key filter, which allows you to select any RGB color invisible in your scene and make it invisible. It's excellent for keying out solid color backgrounds. I use it a lot for creating fake alpha channels so I can layer movies over each other, cutting down on the need to render complex scenes. It's a somewhat expensive program to purchase, but well worth it--particularly when used in conjunction with Adobe Premiere and your favorite animation program. Just thought I'd pass that along. Peter (Dr Zik)
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I just thought I'd share a little discovery... Poser is pretty good for easily creating/animating characters. 3DS MAX is a better modelling too etc... So I figured if I could combine the two that'd be perfect. But 3DS MAX seems to have a hard time importing Poser 4 figures... I lose clothing and textures. The solution I came up with fits certain situations (including mine). Render your poser animation on a blue background. Then render you max animation. Then, there is a special function in Adobe Photoshop where you can merge the two into one clip and have your poser animation the foreground and the max animation the background. Adobe does this by elimating the blue background in your poser animation (actually it can be any colour background, not just blue)... Anyways, it's pretty cool and easy when it fits your needs....