So I got this aPen clip from Woot! for like 12 bucks. It's a little digital device that clips onto the page you're drawing on and saves what you draw on the page. You can connect it to your computer to download an image file of it later. Seemed like a neat idea right? And for $12 I thought, what the hell. Well the device doesn't really stay still and that makes it so the lines don't match up exactly as you go along. Now you would think this to be a huge annoyance, but to tell you the truth, I think it kinda does some interesting things. Here are just some doodles testing it out that I think added some character to what I was sketching. Sketch 1 Sketch 2
Overview This is Episode 2 of the internet cartoon series I made back in 2003 starring my kids Xylus and Dexter. The original story was 17 pages but I broke it up into 2 minute episodes. I was on a Rocky & Bullwinkle kick at the time and I liked how they would tell a story over a series of episodes. Plus, since I was still learning, I could try out different things as I went along part to part. Kind of like the Rocky cartoons where one segment would look very different from another in the separate stories. Cartoon Xylus & Dexter in Space! Ep.2 - What's That? Concept The boys have crash landed on Mars in front of a creepy castle. Art For speed, I had stopped using a brush for inking and changed to Pigma Micron size 08 marker. It doesn't have the pressure sensitivity of the brush but gives a good solid black line. Inked castle background Inked Mars background Animation I was able to use a lot of the body elements I made for the last episode. So all I...
Got an email from +Grant Baciocco telling me that a storyboard I made was just used in the August 2014 issue of Sound On Sound Magazine . It's from a cartoon I had animated for Grant's podcast series " The Radio Adventures of Dr. Floyd ". The article is about the use of storyboards for sound and design. "you start by acquiring a storyboard of key events (even crude drawings will be useful) and any stills or visual inspiration, such as clips of other movies the animators are using as their own reference. You can probably also get hold of early animatics of the movie (animations that are not properly rendered, or completed visually, but are sequenced chronologically as per the storyboard)." Here's the page from the article in the magazine: Related articles Dungeons & Dragons View-Master Reels from 1983 "Little Lala" Roulette Animated Short 'Create Your Own' 3D Printed figures that look like you
Tom
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