![]() I'm okay with how sequences turned out but I had to keep the scenes super limited because it simply took too long to draw FBF frames using the native ASP tools and I was running out of time. I made a note at the time that we needed a better tool for drawing FBF sequences for future projects.Īt the moment, I'm using Animate Pro at home for FBF but mostly I'm using it to help me learn and use Harmony at my workplace. But I'm still interested in CACANi because at some point we'll probably need two copies of an FBF program in our home studio, and it's not likely that we can justify buying two licenses of Animate Pro to use on our personal projects. If CANCANi can work as well as Animate Pro for FBF, all the better. Naturally, when we start our next 2D project, I want to give DKWRoot's FBF tools a chance too. If I can keep it all inside of ASP, even better still.Įrnesttx wrote:I'm exploring a different route for lip sync, as well. There's so little lipsync in Scareplane that I just animated it directly inside ASP. In doing that tiny bit though, I found scrubbing and using switch layers in ASP to be very easy. For more dialog heavy projects that we may do in the future, I would probably try tying the switch layers for the mouth shapes to a Smart Bone Dial for easier switching. ![]() In some of our other projects, we use Magpie Pro to animate the lipsync. Magpie Pro is similar to Papagayo but with a lot more features. We used it to animate the mouth shapes for 'Happy Box', which was our first 3D short, and we're also using it for the short we're working on now 'B2' (a work-in-progress). Retrieved June 12, 2013.In 'Happy Box', we rendered the mouths 'Robot Chicken-style', meaning the mouth shapes were output as hand drawn 2D image sequences from Magpie and and then texture mapped (i.e., 'pasted on') to the faces.
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