Trying to catch the feel of moving art. Used Moho Mirage and toonboom.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1q4vqTbuIQ
Enjoy!
Gran Convolution
Moderators: Víctor Paredes, Belgarath, slowtiger
Gran Convolution
"and then Man created god!"
- toonertime
- Posts: 595
- Joined: Tue Feb 27, 2007 8:34 am
- Location: ST. LOUIS
animation master
I am curious what you think about
Animation:Master. It seems like it
might be friendly towards animators.
Animation:Master. It seems like it
might be friendly towards animators.
I was spoiled by DPaint and Brilliance, back when I used the Amiga so I tend to find this programs lacking in ease of use and short in what I'm capable of squeezing out of them. I like Mirage a bit more than Toonboom, as far as Animation Master I liked it very much until version 9 came out, for me that was a disaster, I've been thinking of giving it another try to see if it is stable now.
"and then Man created god!"
Well, as you will probably deduce from my name, I am a huge Amiga fan and, like you, was spoiled by DPaint and Brilliance also. Mirage obviously developed from an Amiga program and is very similar to Brilliance etc - probably why I like it so much.
Animation:Master V9 was bad. However, I can assure you, it is very stable now (for me anyway) so give it a try.
I'm using Anime Studio a lot at present and I'm constantly amazed by the results achievable. I'm not bragging at all, and it may not come off of course, but a colleague and I are doing tests using AS for a proposed new BBC series and, though I'm obviously biased, I think they will like the results when we deliver next week. I hope so anyway as I can't imagine being able to do this so easily in any other software - fingers crossed
Animation:Master V9 was bad. However, I can assure you, it is very stable now (for me anyway) so give it a try.
I'm using Anime Studio a lot at present and I'm constantly amazed by the results achievable. I'm not bragging at all, and it may not come off of course, but a colleague and I are doing tests using AS for a proposed new BBC series and, though I'm obviously biased, I think they will like the results when we deliver next week. I hope so anyway as I can't imagine being able to do this so easily in any other software - fingers crossed

Re: animation master
It IS friendly towards animators, but it lacks in a few areas:toonertime wrote:I am curious what you think about
Animation:Master. It seems like it
might be friendly towards animators.
1) incredibly slow render time
2) particles are even slower and kinda suck
3) materials do not animate well and are slower yet to render
4) not industry-standard and/or compatible with mainstream 3d software.
If you are interested in breaking into 3D, try blender. It's very industry standard, faster, more stable and FREE. http://www.blender.org
Mark