Except for the old Marvel cartoons from the 70's... those were like... 12's... :-D

On 30/01/2014 1:33 PM, Matt Lind wrote:

I used to be a cel animator, I’m pretty sure it’s on 2’s for the general case.

 

 

Matt

 

 

 

From: softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com [mailto:softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com] On Behalf Of Ahmidou Lyazidi
Sent: Thursday, January 30, 2014 3:07 AM
To: softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
Subject: Re: The Lego Movie: Behind the Scenes and How They Made the Movie

 

Cell animation isn't 2's, it's just a varying rate depending of the motion speed, it can be 1,2,3's sometimes more.

And for stop motion, it really depends, for example when aardman and dreamworks did Flushed Away,

they freeze 1 frame every 4 frames to mimic their stop motion look.

It might also be an economic choice.

 


-----------------------------------------------
Ahmidou Lyazidi
Director | TD | CG artist
http://vimeo.com/ahmidou/videos
http://www.cappuccino-films.com

 

2014-01-29 Matt Lind <ml...@carbinestudios.com>

Stop motion is typically shot on 1's, cel animation on 2's.

Haven't seen the Lego movie, but what usually gives stop motion that jerky quality is the lack of motion blur, and the depth of field not quite mimicking the real world.


Matt



-----Original Message-----
From: softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com [mailto:softimage-boun...@listproc.autodesk.com] On Behalf Of Eric Thivierge

Sent: Monday, January 27, 2014 10:11 AM
To: softimage@listproc.autodesk.com
Subject: Re: The Lego Movie: Behind the Scenes and How They Made the Movie

I left Animal probably 1/3 of the way into Lego after I finished on WWD and I didn't see any stop motion going on from that side of the studio.
Not sure what was done after I left. If you wait like 3-4 hours Raf should be awake and have downed a nice Australian coffee and will be able to shed more light.

I do remember them animating on 2's at one point to give that stop-mo look though.

Eric T.

On Monday, January 27, 2014 1:05:11 PM, Luc-Eric Rousseau wrote:
> >From what I've seen around the web, the director has been going
> >around
> saying it's a mixed of stop-motion and CGI. Are there any frames that
> are actually stop motion?
>
> On Mon, Jan 27, 2014 at 10:13 AM, Alan Fregtman <alan.fregt...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Nice!! Great work, animals. :)
>>
>>>

 


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