shape builder tool in Adobe Illustrator
ellipse tool. holding shift makes it a perfect circle, alt +shift makes it come out from center
make sure that the circle is in the absolute center of the paper
make small circle outside of big circle. watch for green lines that will tell me when I've hit center line of paper
alt and drag to duplicate the shape, pull it over to the left until green lines appear and both circles are the same size and centered
green lines and dots appear to help me line things up
alignment tools show up when you're on black arrow mode?
center alignment tool which makes the small circles line up in the center of the big circle.
shape builder tool (small circle next to big circle), left click and drag from small circle to space next to other small circle but inside big circle to create yin yang symbol. repeat on other side.
creating patterns
blob tool
brackets make brush bigger or smaller, like in photshop
object_ pattern_ make
dialogue box will allow you to futz with it
to make a brick wall, create one brick and then choose pattern and tile
hit done, then hit swatches to right hand side. you must save a copy to be able to use it in multiple documents
create spline with pen tool and then fill it with pattern swatch
This is how I can make textile patterns and other items for costume use.
Showing posts with label BDM142. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BDM142. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Sunday, March 15, 2015
BDM 125, BDM126, Animation Reviews, Week of 15 March
Weekend binge knit/watch: Archer
(TV series 2009-) "At ISIS, an international spy agency, global crises are merely opportunities for its highly trained employees to confuse, undermine, betray and royally screw each other." Now, there's a Logline! Production companies: FX Productions, Floyd County Productions, Radical Axis, Trinity Summit.
Showrunner/writer Adam Reed.
I like the lush paintings in the background and attention to detail. I like how the characters have dark lines around them and strong highlight, midtones, and stylish shadows. They never get lost on the screen and the two styles totally mesh. (I can see using this balance of set and character design in "Monkey Saves the DayPaint!") There are great costume, hair and set choices. And it's funny.
The writers write to the show's animation limitations. How Archer Gets Made has an excellent storyboard showing a sequence of talking heads (cheap and easy to make) followed by a jeep rolling through a jungle (expensive to make and where the most bang for the buck comes from in the scene).
Floyd County Productions art director Neal Holman and animation director Bryan Fordney in Animating 'Archer'
How do they make the sets?
NH: The way we get a design going is Chad Hurd and I will work on something that we think best suits the needs of the scripts and the aesthetic that Adam is going for in his scene. We’ll get his thoughts on it and once a design is locked, we give it to our 3D team and they build that environment. Once it’s built, we can put our camera anywhere inside it and kick out a render and then pass it on to our background team, our painters, who paint over that render. So, it’s not just an out-of-the-box render that goes straight to television. It goes through our painters first so it looks more like a painting than it does a stale 3D render.
What program do they use to make the characters move?
BF: We use Adobe After Effects for the character acting, which is almost more similar to 3D animation than it is to traditional animation because we are essentially creating rigs, like 3D character puppets, but we are doing it in 2D.
NH: Adobe Illustrator is where we’re building all of the elements for the character rigs. We’ll draw Archer standing in a tuxedo, but that one illustration of Archer in his tuxedo is split up into several different layers, so that his hand is on a layer, his forearm is on a layer, his bicep is on a layer, etc. In After Effects, we’ll link those three layers together, so that when I move the bicep, the forearm and the hand move with it. It becomes like a puppet rig.
More research articles:
Adam Reed on writing for 'Archer'
Adam Reed talks Archer: intereview on AWN
The Twisted Genius Behind Sterling Archer
Sunday, March 1, 2015
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