Forum - View topicNEWS: Gurren Lagann Staff Streams Kill la Kill Anime's 30-Second Ad
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noblesse oblige
Posts: 280 Location: Florida |
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As soon as I saw the somewhat alternative style character designs, I knew people were going to get turned off by it. I'm excited to see what kind of series it turns into and could care less about the character design, unless it somehow doesn't fit the mood of the show.
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totoum
Posts: 49 |
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Here you go, in section 2.9
As the wiki says:
That's where you're getting mixed up,just because computers are being used as part of the process in something like Little Witch Academia doesn't mean it's not hand drawn. Last edited by totoum on Sun Sep 01, 2013 11:56 am; edited 2 times in total |
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Trisection
Posts: 4 |
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The point here is that the animation, which was pointed out as the skeleton of the final product, is still produced the same way. The wikipedia page you linked has the digital ink and paint section right after traditional ink-and-paint and camera. Later on it mentions Gertie the Dinosaur, which was drawn entirely on paper including the backgrounds. They had to redraw even the non-moving parts because everything was on one layer. No cels and paint there, but they animated the dinosaur the same way the animators at Disney animated Snow White. As I've said earlier, the method of animation hasn't changed and the animator's job has remained the same throughout the decades. A number of animators who worked on Akira and other big productions still work today. Here's another one from the same page:
So only the final stages have changed since Gertie the Dinosaur. The main process, which involves redrawing the character again and again by hand is the same and takes the most time AND skill. If you ask me, digital animation refers to animation that uses technology to help create movement. The bone tool, 3D rigs, Flash tweening software etc. The only difference in the traditional process now is the use of digital paint. Back then they had to mix colors, paint the back sides of cels to avoid going beyond the lines and wait for it to dry. This process has no real advantages over digital coloring, which is why even Miyazaki adopted it and he's someone people keep mentioning whenever "hand-drawn" or "traditional" is brought up. When he says he wants to keep his stuff purely hand drawn he means drawing everything that moves in the traditional manner. This is pretty much the same thing done in the average TV series, but for scenes where they lack the time or skill to animate, like a car in the background while the characters cross the road, they might either opt to use 3D instead or not include the car at all. So yes, there's more CG in anime today, but at best they keep it at a minimum for moving objects. For backgrounds, anime uses a mix of physical and digital paint. Other cases use filtered photographs when the show is set in a real place like Tsuritama. Here's something I found interesting:
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configspace
Posts: 3717 |
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Currently all anime starts off with sketches which are then scanned. How much remains on paper vs how much is done on the computer varies by studio. For example, cleanup can be done digitally or by hand before scanning. Some have moved onto doing much of the tweening digitally now, with onion-skinning software, digital x-sheets for timing etc. instead of manually on paper on lightbox. (though the key frames sketches are still done this way on paper by most) Aside from obvious 3D models, special effects are mostly CG produced now however.
But for character animation, even if the entire process were digital from the beginning--doing all sketches, storyboards, etc digitally--as is it actually more efficient especially for collaboration and asset management, it would still be hand drawn. Drawing something with a stylus on a tablet is still drawing the image with your hands! In other words, anime is both digital and hand drawn. Usually the term to differentiate between CG and digital, non-3d CG and flash/vector based animation is frame-by-frame (FbF) animation. Of course a show can have a mix of all of them |
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Fencedude5609
Posts: 5088 |
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Yeah, the implicit claim that doing art fully on the computer "doesn't count" is pretty stupid.
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