Facial Expressions Top Image Row 2 & 3 Row 4 Row 5: Left, Middle, Right Bottom Image (Source Unknown)
#come through baba
Comrades in Minneapolis—this video from Chile shows how to extinguish tear gas canisters quickly, safely, and easily. To deal with tear gas canisters, take a water jug with a wide mouth, put a little baking soda, dish soap, and/or vegetable oil in the jug of water—3 tablespoons of each to 1 liter of water. Pick up the canister with protective gloves (it’s hot and can burn you!), drop it in the jug, and shake the jug while covering the top with your gloved hand just enough that the gas doesn’t get out. Don’t cover the top too tightly—you don’t want to make the jug explode. Don’t let the police or #COVID19 cut off your air supply. Fight back! #icantbreathe #GeorgeFloyd #Minneapolis
Alignment chart ft vocaloid series you were into in middle school/freshman year of high school
Know what I’m salty about?
In all my art classes, I was never taught HOW to use the various tools of art.
Like yes, form, and shape and space and color theory and figure drawing is important, but so is KNOWING what different tools do.
I’m 29 and I JUST learned this past month that India Ink is fucking waterproof when it dries. Why is this important? Because I can line something in India Ink and then go over it with watercolors. And that has CHANGED the ENTIRE way I art and the ease I can create with.
tldr: Art Teachers: teach your students what different tools do. PLEASE.
You don’t have to be black, it just means you support us, you stand by us and you’re for us.
some underappreciated vines i haven’t seen in any vine compilation yet i that found way deep in my vines tag
Aries:
Taurus:
Gemini:
Cancer:
Leo:
Virgo:
Libra:
Scorpio:
Saggitarius:
Capricorn:
Aquarius:
Pisces:
after that you can just merge everything or dont (i didnt merge it) and then you would get:
some stuff to mention:
ty for the compliment i appreciate it <33
sorry if my handwriting is hard to read xd
along the making of this tutorial thing i had no idea where this was going, so i just decided to do a tutorial on how i did certain details of water and shit
there were multiple different things i did for drawing water while i made the comic so it seemed more appropriate to just do a tutorial(?)/explanation on what i did and how i did it
some of this information may not be accurate since im not a pro at art or anything i just learn from what i see
some parts mostly consisted of trial and error since water is a pain in the ass (dont be afraid of that)
there are other people who could have given a better tutorial and process than me, and this is just what i know, so maybe this helped you and others in some way, who knows ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
What is smearing? Smearing is a multitude of techniques used in animation to bridge two or more frames to create the illusion of motion through methods like blurring, warping, distortion, and a few others.
I wanted to start of with a fresh animation to demonstrate some movements.
It looks like it can definitely use some extra information to convey the motion of the sword. This is where we starting thinking about how to smear the object(s).
The most common approach that I’ve noticed that animators take, especially newer animators, is that they warp the whole object. As in they have a point A, and a point B, and then they just have a “mass” of implied motion in between those points.
Here’s a still shot
It works quite well with objects like swords. So here’s what my attempt looked like.
It definitely helped explain the movements more, but I’m not sure I liked it.
Thankfully there are other “types” of smears that we can look at to try to see if they fit in this particular animation.
The next one I wanted to try was “speedlining.” This is basically when you distort the edges or add speedlines to the edges to make the object appear in motion.
Here’s an example
and the still shot:
notices how the edges appear more sketchy. This one is really common and it can be executed in different ways.
Here’s my attempt
I really like this type of smearing, even though it still lacks some of the motion that the first iteration lacked. The speedlines really add character to the motion that would otherwise be missing in a normal warp, but I still needed that smear to bring it to the point where it needed to be.
So here’s what some call “doubling.” (and just as a side comment, I don’t think any of these have “official names” other than just smearing)
Here’s the still shot
This was a really well executed smear which I don’t think would have worked the same if you would have just warped the faces.
Here’s another slightly different execution
with the still shot
It’s like a distortion mixed with doubling, and that’s what I like about smears.. you can mix and match things you feel would work in the particular scene.
So here’s my mix n’ match smear.
Not the best execution, but for our purposes I think it works well.
Motion blurring is really powerful as well. Film uses it all the time, as does 2d animation. Notice the force of the impact being pronounced with the added blur at the head.
Here’s the still shot
There are a few other smears I thought were interesting because it just speaks to the way our brain interprets these frames without even considering the logical implications of the individual frames.
Here’s one example
I don’t know if you caught that, but here is the still shot:
The guy has a knob for a hand. It works so well, you don’t stop to think about implication of that hand’s morphology.
Here’s another one that doesn’t make too much sense.
Like what is this
That’s Imaishi. It’s part of why we love that animator so much. It’s part of his style and character. It conveys an emotion that would otherwise be absent in a “realistic” smear. Animation doesn’t have to make sense. It just has to look good.