Friday, January 24, 2014

Animation on your Phone: Part 2


Cellphones can do almost anything these days and now animators can shoot pencil tests on their iPhones.  Hopefully, you aspiring animators out there could benefit from the following information.

I met up with Dota Sata, a second-year animation student at Woodbury University, who shot an entire animated film in pencil test form using his iPhone. I have documented his process so other animation students can do the same thing, with just an iPhone, an iPad and a working knowledge of After Effects and Premiere.

The Shooting Process


Dota has both an iPhone and an iPad along with an app called iMotion Remote. This app is free, but you will have to pay for the Export function which allows you to export your image sequence into other programs like After Effects CS6 and Premiere Pro CS6.

Just attach your iPhone to a tripod or copystand, aiming your iPhone's camera downward with the artwork underneath. Dota attached a Joby GripTight mount to his iPhone.


Each drawing is placed onto an ACME pegbar and illuminated by two lights at 45% angles on either side of the stand. The iPhone's camera must be adjusted to make sure the focus and exposure are locked before shooting.


Dota can control his phone's camera using an iPad and iMotion to shoot one frame at a time by touching the iPad's screen to trigger the iPhone.


The iPad controls the phone, but doesn't make a sound during the shooting process and can run on battery if the scene doesn't take too long to shoot. Dota says it took about 16 hours to shoot his short animated film, "Door to the Promised Land".  Enjoy...


Post-Production

Once all the artwork has been shot by the iPhone, all the jpeg images will be put into iMotion's photo library. This is when you will need to import the jpegs into After Effects as an image sequence.

Open After Effects CS6 to import the jpeg image files and check the box labelled "Force alphabetical order". This will place your jpeg image sequence onto one layer instead of separate layers. When it's on one layer, click on the third icon at the lower left corner labeled "Expand or Collapse the In/Out/Duration/Stretch panes", which displays these 4 choices. The control called Stretch will be on 100% showing each image as one frame. By changing Stretch to 200%, each image will be shown for 2 frames.

Hold that Pose!
If you want to hold an image for 3 or more frames, you can copy the image and then cut and paste it back on the timeline. Repeating this process pastes the same image for as many frames as you want.

On 1's or 2's?
If you want your animation to move on 2's and then switch to 1's, you would have to create two layers, one layer would be for the 1's and the other layer would be for 2's; each layer could have holds as well.

What if you added a background?
A background can be placed as another layer under the animation layers. Also remember that this is a pencil test, so your background might show thru your animated drawings. If you don't want this and want a solid color on your animated character, you will have to do more work by importing these images into Photoshop to add a solid fill color. Of course this process will add more time and can also be done afterwards in Toon Boom's Harmony or Animate Pro.

You can then export your file as a Quicktime, h264, etc. into Premiere to add it to the current cut or add sound or whatever you need to do.

To Scan or not to Scan ? 
This whole iPhone process grew out of not wanting to spend extra time using a scanner to scan in each of the nearly 1000 drawings that Dota had created. You can even scan your drawings without placing each one onto a taped down pegbar for registration. 

Lilly Vogelesang, Toon Boom's product manager, told me that there is a peg registration feature in Animate Pro and Harmony. All you need to do is make sure there is no written or drawn information around the peg hole and flat hole area. A written scene or cel # or even a smudge could throw the registration process off.

"By placing a black card behind each drawing to be scanned," said Vogelesang, "Toon Boom's software can use those blackened peg holes to align the drawings in the program. The only thing to be aware of is that you need to know the DPI that you're scanning the images in with in order to set the settings. This process is called "Optical Registration". You can access the advanced vectorization options just by double-clicking on the vectorization preset in the import images dialog." Here's a link to this process in Harmony which explains it better than I can.
 
So, the next time you pick up your iPhone, you can either order a pizza or shoot a pencil test or maybe even both.

Here are a few other links that might help you if you don't own an iPhone.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/create-stop-motion-animations-5-fun-apps-iphone-android/
and
http://appsineducation.blogspot.com/2011/10/10-animation-apps.html
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 Hello? Ello?? If you've learned something from this, have a different process, comments or suggestions or have a good deal on an iPhone, please leave a comment or email me: heyjimr@gmail.com
 






Saturday, January 11, 2014

Animation Stand on your phone: Part 1

 
When I was a kid growing up in sunny Florida, I would often shoot cut out animation outside with my Super 8mm camera and using the sun as my movie lights. Usually it worked out pretty good, but sometime when I would get the film back from the photo store a week later, I would discover that the images would get darker whenever a cloud blocked the direct sunlight. I learned to shoot short scenes using the sunlight method and to avoid partly cloudy days. Eventually, I set up a few photo floods and would shoot the animation inside my house. I read books and magazines like Super 8 Filmmaker, about shooting on copy stands and learned from a lot of my mistakes. Click here to take a look at this magazine from my childhood and maybe yours as well.

Recently, I was teaching a small group of students how to scan in their drawings into ToonBoom's Animate Pro and made a joke that the hardest part of this process was loading and unloading the drawings from the scanner. I really appreciate this process, since I remember the days of having to lift up a platen of glass, place the drawing on the pegs, close the platen and then having to turn several dials to move the peg bar or the entire compound to the north, south, east or west. I was working under a manual Oxberry animation stand shooting on 16mm film and moving all these direction each frame, without making a mistake. This process could take hours to shoot and it took a lot of concentration to do. So doing the same moves and pushing a button to scan in a drawing is simple to me. Yes, it does take time to do, but its gotten a lot easier than those old Oxberry days.

One student wanted to avoid this scanning process altogether and had come up with a way to shoot his  animated film using his cel phone. I was amazed to see the results and wanted to find out how he did it. And so, here is Dota Sata's pencil test entirely shot on his cel phone. 


Email me your questions, comments, suggestions, feedback, let me know you are out there and not a robot, heyjimr@gmail.com. Thank You!

Next posting: Animation Stand on your phone: Part 2