Showing posts with label EGD335. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EGD335. Show all posts
Friday, May 21, 2010
Dynamic Character Animation Sequence
Dynamic Character Animation Sequence
EGD335 - 3D Animation: Assignment three.
Fall 2009 – First Semester, junior year
Montreal Campus
This was the most entertaining animation project I’ve done so far. This project was to use everything we’ve learned to create a 10 second animation of a bipedal character that can pick up and drop an object. The character also had to do 5 different actions. I tried very hard to set up my character to get as much control over it as I could. I used a combination of tutorials my Art & Animation advisor created, as well as the Learning Autodesk Maya 2008 The Modeling & Animation Handbook to help me with rigging my character. I wanted my animation to be very fast paced, and have minimal pause times. Whenever I animated my character I’d think to myself “What would Jackie Chan do?” My original animation had a few hiccups in it, where the character would do some very unnatural movements that looked really weird if you watched it a few times. Excluding the jumping over the table, either my roommates or I would act out certain positions. I’d also look on youtube for freerunners or parkour traceurs to get a better understanding of the limits of movement the human body is capable of. I came into a big problem about 3/4ths of the way into animating the project, which was Gimbal Lock. Thankfully I was aware of what Gimbal lock was before I encountered it since fellow students in the past had problems with it in previous assignments. Thankfully I was able to fix it for some things on the character, but unfortunately for something like the boomerang I wasn’t able to.
The difference between this video and the one i submitted is that this video has an increased resolution and a different lighting setup. Also rendered using Mental ray.
Walk, Run, Jump!
Walk, Run, Jump!
EGD335 - 3D Animation: Assignment two.
Fall 2009 – First Semester, junior year
Montreal Campus
This assignment was to create and animate a figure that had a large center of mass compared to the rest of its body. Just think of Mike Wazowski, the one-eyed green guy from Pixar’s Monsters, Inc. I just created a skull with basic robotic-like arms and legs, but the main part of the assignment was to animate him walking, running, and jumping. We used The Animator’s Survival Kit by Richard Williams as a guide when creating our cycles. This book is filled with 2D animation techniques, but it applies very nicely to 3D animation as well. This project actually started making me enjoy animation just a little more. Maybe it was because when things went wrong I was able to find a solution or easy work around, or it was the sense of making a biped character come alive. Whatever it was, the project was pretty fun. We had no limit on joints, and I don’t even think we had a limit on time since it was just a cycle. We had to render out the walk, run, and jump cycle in a front, side, and 3/4ths view.
The difference between this video and the one i submitted is that this video has an increased resolution and a different lighting setup. Also rendered using Mental ray.
Obstacle Course
EGD335 - 3D Animation: Assignment one.
Fall 2009 – First Semester, junior year
Montreal Campus
I wasn’t too excited about this project. I already knew we were going to be limited in the amount of joints we could use, and wasn’t looking forward to it. This assignment was to create an obstacle course for an object that only had one point of contact to the ground. This is pretty much the same as the assignment I did using the fire extinguisher, but our animated object needed to hop and move around things. We were required to make it do a certain number of actions, at 30 frames per second for at least 18 seconds. I didn’t feel like doing something like the fire extinguisher because it had very limited moving parts, so I went with something more complex. Pixar did such a nice job when they animated Luxo jr. because he (or she?) was able to use the weight of its head to assist it in moving around. I wanted to do the same thing and tried to mimic a small robotic arm (kind of like the arms that you see in automobile assembly lines). After figuring out how to make a nice skeleton for him only using 5 joints, I noticed I could take advantage of his claw for some nice secondary animation. The animation was supposed to be longer, but I started getting annoyed because my hierarchy of joints and controls wasn’t allowing me to do what I wanted the claw to do. I found this out during the middle of animating it and didn’t feel like going back to fix it, but I sucked it up and animated him the best I could.
Labels:
2009,
Animation,
Champlain College Montréal,
EGD335,
Fall,
Obstacle Course
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