
Mine is prolly the worst here... it sucks.
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- sacrejacques
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- Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 11:06 pm
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- sacrejacques
- Posts: 66
- Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 11:06 pm
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Ok. First of all, nice work for a new moho user.
Episode 1: I liked the most the part when that funky music starts and those surreal colours and shapes go crazy
Episode 2: I couldnt get this one right...
Episode 3: I liked the "Yaiii, Jetpacks!"
But the sound was... terrible
You ain't nothing but a hounddog:
Good idea, but this idea has a whole lot of potencial to really go crazy.
Therefore u need better lipsync, camera movements, views, and the solo part is great for really freaky things...
keep it up
Episode 1: I liked the most the part when that funky music starts and those surreal colours and shapes go crazy

Episode 2: I couldnt get this one right...

Episode 3: I liked the "Yaiii, Jetpacks!"


You ain't nothing but a hounddog:
Good idea, but this idea has a whole lot of potencial to really go crazy.
Therefore u need better lipsync, camera movements, views, and the solo part is great for really freaky things...

keep it up


Hi, thanks for your work and for sharing it with us. Welcome to moho and to the moho forum. Other here have commented here on your work, and I too would like to say "great job for a beginner!" I'm always excited to see how quickly people new to moho can turn out interesting work.
My comments are going to be in the form of suggestions for the sound work. I personally use audacity for sound editing (open source, at audacity.sourceforge.net). It has a tool in there called "normalize" and that should help a lot with making the different voice levels match up in your soundtrack (some are loud, some are soft, etc.) Also, when splicing different pieces together, there is an audible click. Audacity will help with those transitions. Post back here if you need help using audacity, or for other pointers.
Keep working!
jorgy
My comments are going to be in the form of suggestions for the sound work. I personally use audacity for sound editing (open source, at audacity.sourceforge.net). It has a tool in there called "normalize" and that should help a lot with making the different voice levels match up in your soundtrack (some are loud, some are soft, etc.) Also, when splicing different pieces together, there is an audible click. Audacity will help with those transitions. Post back here if you need help using audacity, or for other pointers.
Keep working!
jorgy
Yes i agree with this suggestion,sacrejacques you should learn to get around with a good recording&audio software as soon as possiblejorgy wrote: My comments are going to be in the form of suggestions for the sound work. I personally use audacity for sound editing (open source, at audacity.sourceforge.net). It has a tool in there called "normalize" and that should help a lot with making the different voice levels match up in your soundtrack (some are loud, some are soft, etc.) Also, when splicing different pieces together, there is an audible click. Audacity will help with those transitions. Post back here if you need help using audacity, or for other pointers.


- sacrejacques
- Posts: 66
- Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 11:06 pm
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- sacrejacques
- Posts: 66
- Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 11:06 pm
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i made a new animation www.zebradillo.com/animations then click misc and watch robot loser...or lookit other lamer stuff
- sacrejacques
- Posts: 66
- Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 11:06 pm
- Contact:
- sacrejacques
- Posts: 66
- Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2005 11:06 pm
- Contact: