If anyone knows any good software for traditional animation that is free or VERY cheap, plz tell me

Moderators: Víctor Paredes, Belgarath, slowtiger
There are a few others to look for, depending on your budget.Patmals wrote:Oh and there are a few i can think of as well
Project dogwaffle has Trad Anim tools in it www.thebest3d.com
Plastic animation paper http://www.plasticanimationpaper.dk/
there are more..cant remember them at the moment
please look through the other listed "other software" in this particular forum
oh, good, that's good to hear.Sequent wrote:Nobody seems to be worried about Bauhaus over at the Bauhaus forums. As a Bauhaus user it seems that you're entitled to an upgrade version of TVPaint, so I don't think you lose by being a Bauhaus owner. (at least from what I understand)
And Bauhaus/TVPaint/Aura or whatever you want to call it is pretty cool for traditional animation - especially if you are used to and like working with a tablet.
yes that's correct. The same basic ideas as PD Pro (Project Dogwaffle 3) though in some ways more sophisticated I suppose and hence more pricey. For example, is the alpha channel animated? layers animated?Bones3D wrote:Mirage is a bit of a different approach to animation compared to Moho/Anime Studio. My understanding of it, is that you use it to import hand-drawn keyframes, then use it to ink/paint and generate tweening based on that. Basically, it's designed more for traditional animators rather than for newer flash animators.
Correct. In fact ironically I have used this comparison a lot for Dogwaffle too, when people ask if it's an alternative to Painter, it's really more a mix of Painter and Photoshop and After Effects, given the animation features, the filters that can be applied across the frame sequence of an animation, with keyframed changes of their parameters, and with the ability to load an animation (image sequence or Avi file for example) into the brush and paint that over another animation.Sequent wrote:I think of Mirage as kind of a hybrid between Painter (in some ways) and After Effects. It's bitmap - based. You can import things you scanned, but also draw directly within the program - especially if you have a tablet.
here are samples of traditional anims and post work, compositing etc...
Which I think is what the original poster was looking for.
So, it's nice that you can do animation and also compositing, etc.
you might want to read up on it then. TV Paint is where it all started for Aura and eventually Mirage, which are both derivatives (also known as oem versions, rebranded and sold under a different name by a 3rd party) of TV paint.
The pricing on Mirage itself is a lot cheaper now than when it was first introduced. I think the basic version is something like $395 as opposed to being something like $795. There is also Mirage Studio, which is $595 I think, and that includes the Animator's Toolbar and Board-o-matic (for storyboards). Note too: this might be temporary promotional pricing.
You can always get the basic version and then get Animator's Toolbar and Board-o-matic separately later. Or upgrade to Studio. All depending on your budget and what you need.
I don't know that much about TVPaint.