I was watching "Duck Amuck" today and studied different parts of the animation frame by frame. The timing and expressions are priceless. I found my favorite mad face (and there were many!) and drew it.
Friday, September 25, 2009
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Drawing #12 - Rabbit's Joy
I really enjoyed drawing this one, though it took a while to get the construction correct. This is a shot I found watching "Winnie The Pooh And Tigger Too!". Rabbit ditches Tigger and comes up with this great smile. Don Bluth animated Rabbit and it shows. Lots of great emotion in every frame. Love it!
Drawing #11 - Preston's dog
Drawing #10 - Our dog "Ginger"
Drawing #9 - Drawing loose with Preston's Swing Shift Cinderella
I was checking out a video that Don Bluth put together on learning to draw loose. I gave it a shot with Preston Blair's girl from Swing Shift Cinderella. No details, just loose drawing. This was a freeing exercise because I tend to hold my pencil way too tight.
Here's the screen shot I used from "Swing Shift Cinderella" animated by the one...the only...Preston Blair himself.
Here's the screen shot I used from "Swing Shift Cinderella" animated by the one...the only...Preston Blair himself.
Drawing #8 - Sad Sasha
Drawing #7 - Sasha
Don Bluth has a great website where he's helping regular folks like me learn to animate. I've learned quite a bit about the process and he's got a "Cyber Garage Project" going that gives members a chance to animate a scene from a short film he developed. Here's a drawing of one of the characters called "Sasha". You can see the turn around reference here. She a cute little bunny.
Drawing #6 - Jeremy
Drawing #2 - Preston Blair Egg Heads
Throughout this blog you'll find drawings that I'm working on from an online copy of Preston Blair's original book called "Advanced Animation" or otherwise known as the "$100,000 Animation Drawing Course. You can find it here. For us broke Dads out there who want to learn to animate, this is a treasure. Here is my first attempt at some egg heads from the book. It's great in learning construction of a simple head.
Drawing #1 - Kip
Here's a little drawing of a character I call "Kip". He represents my lack of confidence in drawing. He's not quite sure of himself and neither am I. Someone asked me if Kip is a canine and he is. So I thrust my drawings out there and see how things progress (Lord willing) or regress.
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