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I've got a job! :D

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So, I guess I should have posted this earlier, but I've been hired by Thomas Kole (dilopho DD) to work on Cyclon, a FPS game in the BGE. I'm down as an animator, but because there isn't much animation to do, I'm also doing some scripting and shading.

There isn't any eyecandy yet, but me and the other animator are working on some neat stuff, and we'll probably get to show some of it soon.
blea

Here is the thing that wasted my time during spring break. Looks cool, doesn't it? It's screen space AO, that great thing that Crysis introduced to a while back. I had a lot of fun coding this into blender, and I hope you enjoy the results.

Links:
Video Above
Thread on BlenderArtists
.Blend File
Technical Paper

Rigging Test

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I've been looking at the awesome facial rigging stuff coming out of Durian, and wanting to understand a better way. What I mean by that is, Durian is going to use the box+slider method. A thread was created by Nathan(cessen) on BlenderArtists to discuss the matter. A very interesting technique was mentioned on that thread.




The technique basically consists of this: the controls (three for the mouth, three for the eyebrows) directly deform a meshdeform cage. The cage deforms the face. On top of that, corrective shape keys, for wrinkles and volume preservation, are driving by the stretch of bones strung between verts on the cage. So you get deformer based controls with the life of shape keys. Pretty cool, huh? :D
So! I had a lot of fun with the Durian modelling sprint, which happened last Saturday. I was at a hotel over the weekend, so I didn't do much modelling until Sunday. At which point I completed the model.

However, during the hotel trip I managed to join the IRC channel, and watch Colin Levy eat a falafel on my dads laptop. The IRC business was a lot of fun, great to see that there are people out there in the community, alive and kicking RIGHT NOW. It was also fun to watch the servers melt into slag when Colin pointed the camera at the chat window! :b

I modelled the broken window, in a low-poly style. I'm not entirely pleased with the materials, but it works, and you can see it here. Thanks, and have a great day!


Pencil development

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Pencil_development

Well, I'm back. And I have a little treat!

Pencil is an open source 2-D animation software which I have used for animations, such as the walkcycle. Currently, Pencil as a user base the size of paramecium, and is as well known to the world as the park at the end of my street. I hope to change that.

Not on my own, of course, but Pencil does need someone with a fair amount of spare time to step up to the plate. I have helped with the wiki a bit, and plan to do some major code documentation.

This release is my modifications to Pencil. It contains key flipping, straight ahead and inbetween onion skinning, and some onion skin preferences.

Rally Pencil! Share it amongst your colleagues! If you're an open source developer, join the project! We need some new blood!

Pencil
Pencil Forum
Pencil Wiki

Charge! Continued

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When I wrote that somewhat encouraging post oh-so long ago, I failed to mention just how this can be accomplished. With me, I need to know how to do something and that it will work before I begin. Even if I go in with the mindset of "this will not work the first time, I will try and learn something", I always end up disappointed in the outcome. Particularly in drawing.

When it comes to drawing, gesture drawing is an amazing skill to learn. To start, you create a single line, just a swoop on the page, that describes the general posture of the model. Then, you add more lines to define form. You work as lightly as you can. The most important thing to remember when gesture drawing, is that when you make a mistake, or something lacks the correct proportions, don't erase, simply make another line the describes what it should look like.

The outcome of this method is simply that, with enough time, anyone can create an amazing drawing without getting frustrated. I'm terrible at drawing, and I have come up with recognizable and realistic drawings in a matter of minutes. The reason? My hand is drawing, not my brain. My brain does not know how, nor want to know how to draw. When I gesture draw, my hand makes a guess, my brain "spots the most obvious differences", and then my hand makes another attempt. My hand is experimenting, failing, and trying something else before I even know it's really made a mistake. It's a great way to learn drawing, because you're getting better without even thinking about it.

And some updates: My blog has stopped for a while because of a linux/firefox error that prevented me from typing text into the editing fields on Movable Type! Very quickly I lost my good blogging habit to the point of not even checking the status after a securuity update. Near as I can tell, it was fixed a few months ago.

Borealis has been given up. It was getting so complex and hairy, that I didn't even understand how it worked anymore. It had huge deformation problems, which were very depressing. Also, the model was absolutely hideous. However, Ramtin Ahmadi has given me the MooM mesh, which I hope to rig sometime.

I "finished" my April 11SecondClub entry, and you can see it here.

CHARGE!

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Okay, so the most important thing about learning animation is this: guess, accept failures, and keep at it. When I got into animation, I didn't know about what good animation looked like. I thought, wow, I just need to prove what I can do, and then, it's on to Pixar! I had done about three animations at that point, and almost no drawing. Now, whenever I try to animate something, I just get frustrated that it doesn't work.

My eye, it seems, is growing faster then my hand. I now know what good animation is not,  but my hand doesn't know what it is. This, of course, is frustrating. The trick to learning is not proving your worth, it's simply guessing at a new idea, seeing if it works, and trying again until the shot seems to flow right.

This can be challenging, because young OCD animators, (like me) need to know exactly what to do, and that it will be perfect, before we do anything. It's a skill young-ins all need to learn.

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