Where did you learn Anime Studio?
Moderators: Víctor Paredes, Belgarath, slowtiger
Where did you learn Anime Studio?
Hey,
I have been messing around with ASP and am stuck on getting bones down but I am working on it.
I wanted to know where did you guys learn ASP? Are there any specific video tutorials, besides the one from the help section on bones.
Thanks!
I have been messing around with ASP and am stuck on getting bones down but I am working on it.
I wanted to know where did you guys learn ASP? Are there any specific video tutorials, besides the one from the help section on bones.
Thanks!
- synthsin75
- Posts: 10253
- Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 11:20 pm
- Location: Oklahoma
- Contact:
- Víctor Paredes
- Site Admin
- Posts: 5814
- Joined: Wed Jan 26, 2005 12:18 am
- Location: Barcelona/Chile
- Contact:
You have to have the shoulder (upper arm) and forearm as two different shapes.
Either by having them on two seperate layers (in a 'traditional' cutout style), or by putting a 'join' at the elbow area with a vector line and creating two shapes on the one layer (with the same colour).
The problem you are seeing is due to having the one shapes outline vector-line overlap its own inner shape.
Sorry if that sounds confusing-I'm sure someone else could explain it better!? (I would have drawn an example but don't have the time right now).
Either by having them on two seperate layers (in a 'traditional' cutout style), or by putting a 'join' at the elbow area with a vector line and creating two shapes on the one layer (with the same colour).
The problem you are seeing is due to having the one shapes outline vector-line overlap its own inner shape.
Sorry if that sounds confusing-I'm sure someone else could explain it better!? (I would have drawn an example but don't have the time right now).
The way I'm learning AS standard:
I printed all the tutorials and the rest of the informative pages. The tutorials aren't comprehensive, you had to read all the "Help" pages. Total pages? 206. Bind'em. I didn´t print tutorials for the "Pro" version.
I did all the tutorials, but not just the exercises: I tried to re-create ALL the images involved. And again, I found that the manual doesn't explain everything. You have to read, try it, read again.
I take the printed pages to all places; read them in a bus, at work, everywhere. So in the night, when I can work in AS at home, I have new ideas, new approaches.
I bought AS three weeks ago. So, I'm not a good animator yet. But I'm on my way... sort of. I found out that the long, boring way is the easiest way.
I printed all the tutorials and the rest of the informative pages. The tutorials aren't comprehensive, you had to read all the "Help" pages. Total pages? 206. Bind'em. I didn´t print tutorials for the "Pro" version.
I did all the tutorials, but not just the exercises: I tried to re-create ALL the images involved. And again, I found that the manual doesn't explain everything. You have to read, try it, read again.
I take the printed pages to all places; read them in a bus, at work, everywhere. So in the night, when I can work in AS at home, I have new ideas, new approaches.
I bought AS three weeks ago. So, I'm not a good animator yet. But I'm on my way... sort of. I found out that the long, boring way is the easiest way.
Re: Where did you learn Anime Studio?
The VTC Anime Studio Pro Tutorials by Mark Bremmer are excellent and very thorough, well worth the money spent.aleXean wrote:Hey,
I have been messing around with ASP and am stuck on getting bones down but I am working on it.
I wanted to know where did you guys learn ASP? Are there any specific video tutorials, besides the one from the help section on bones.
Thanks!
I hope VTC has an upgrade when the new version of ASP hits the market.
Thanks, aleXean. They're just the pages found in Help>Help. I printed them in "letter" size but I got blank spaces in several pages; I don't kinow if that could be prevented printing in "Legal" size. Besides, that could reduce your page count (I printed both sides).
Just by reading the "layers" section you'll get many, many ideas. Not to mention the "Bone layers" and "Bone Tools" pages.
Just by reading the "layers" section you'll get many, many ideas. Not to mention the "Bone layers" and "Bone Tools" pages.
I'm the slowest wallet south of Pecos... I'm El Cheapo!
-
- Posts: 93
- Joined: Thu Sep 13, 2007 8:02 pm
- Location: New York
WMM only accepts uncompressed avi files, wmv files, or dv-avi files for editing. At least that has been my experience. For our first animated movie we exported each "scene" (Anime file) out of Anime as a mov file with the soundtrack (Sorenson 3 compression) and then converted to a dv-avi to import into WMM (dv-avi are very large files, but not as large as uncompressed avis).aleXean wrote:For sure dude, I'm gonna use that thanks!
But right now I have my finished animation right. So right now I need to export it so I can edit it in Windows Movie Maker ( unfortunately that's all I have for the time being )
What file format should I export too?
For our HD short cartoons we export out of Anime each Anime file as an uncompressed avi without the soundtrack. Then we use Windows Media Encoder for Vista to encode the uncompressed avi file (which is HUGE!) to a workable compressed HD wmv file. We then import the wmv file into WMM add the sound track and publish out of WMM with the HD 720p option to make a "HD" wmv file.
Just what we do. I am sure others have better ways for exporting and importing Anime files/animations into WMM.
http://iguessineedajob.wordpress.com/