Sunday, May 15, 2011

FASTE

FASTE is a short cut code for remembering 12 animation principles....

F    -  Follow through & Overlapping
A    - Anticipation 
        Arc
        Appeal
  - Staging
        Slow in & Slow out 
        Secondary Action 
        Squash & Stretch 
        Solid Drawing
  - Timing & Spacing
E    - Exaggeration

Dog Walk Poses



The Animator's Survival Kit

The Animator's Survival Kit: A Manual of Methods, Principles, and Formulas for Classical, Computer, Games, Stop Motion, and Internet Animators  is a book by award-winning animator and director Richard Williams about various aspects of animation. The book includes techniques, advice, tips, tricks, and general information on the history of animation..


List of Disney Movies

Monsters, Inc. 2 2012

  Mars Needs Moms 2011

  Cars 2 2011

  Tinker Bell and the Mysterious Winter Woods 2011

  Winnie the Pooh 2011

  Toy Story 3 2010

  Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue 2010

  Tangled 2010

  Up 2009

  Tigger & Pooh and a Musical Too 2009

  Princess and the Frog, The 2009

  Ponyo 2009

  Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure 2009

  A Christmas Carol 2009

  Wall E 2008

  Bolt 2008

  Tinker Bell 2008

  Little Mermaid III - Ariel's Beginning 2008

  Meet the Robinsons 2007

  Cinderella III: A Twist in Time 2007

  Ratatouille 2007

  Secret of the Magic Gourd, The 2007

  Wild, The 2006

  Cars 2006

  Bambi II 2006

  Fox and the Hound 2, The 2006

  Brother Bear 2 2006

  Chicken Little 2005

  Kronk's New Groove 2005

  Pooh's Heffalump Halloween Movie 2005

  Pooh's Heffalump Movie 2005

  Lilo and Stitch 2: Stich Has a Glitch 2005

  Proud Family Movie, The 2005

  Valiant 2005

  Incredibles, The 2004

  Lion King 1 1/2, The 2004

  Mickey's Twice Upon a Christmas 2004

  Mulan II 2004

  Howl's Moving Castle 2004

  Three Musketeers, The (Animated) 2004

  Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with Roo 2004

  Finding Nemo 2003

  Atlantis: Milo's Return 2003

  Piglet's Big Movie 2003

  Jungle Book 2, The 2003

  101 Dalmations II: Patch's London Adventure 2003

  Brother Bear 2003

  Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Christmas 2002

  Treasure Planet 2002

  Lilo & Stitch 2002

  Cinderella II: Dreams Come True 2002

  Return to Never Land 2002

  Monsters, Inc 2001

  Spirited Away 2001

  Atlantis: The Lost Empire 2001

  Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure 2001

  Recess: School's Out 2001

  Mickey's Magical Christmas: Snowed in at the House of Mouse 2001

  Emperor's New Groove, The 2000

  Little Mermaid II, The: Return to the Sea 2000

  Dinosaur 2000

  Extremely Goofy Movie, An 2000

  Toy Story 2 1999

  Fantasia 2000 1999

  Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas 1999

  Tarzan 1999

  Doug's 1st Movie 1999

  Bugs Life, A 1998

  Lion King II: Simbas Pride, The 1998

  Pocahontas II: Journey to a New World 1998

  Mulan 1998

  My Friends Tigger and Pooh: Super Sleuth Christmas 1998

  Hercules 1997

  Hunchback of Notre Dame, The 1996

  James and the Giant Peach 1996

  Toy Story 1995

  Pocahontas 1995

  Goofy Movie, A 1995

  Lion King, The 1994

  Aladdin 1992

  Beauty and the Beast 1991

  Rescuers Down Under, The 1990

  Little Mermaid, The 1989

  Oliver and Company 1988

  Basil - The Great Mouse Detective 1986

  Black Cauldron, The 1985

  Fox and the Hound, The 1981

  Petes Dragon 1977

  Robin Hood 1973

  AristoCats, The 1970

  Jungle Book, The 1967

  Sword in the Stone, The 1963

  101 Dalmatians (Animated) 1961

  Sleeping Beauty 1959

  Lady and the Tramp 1955

  Peter Pan 1953

  Alice in Wonderland 1951

  Cinderella 1950

  The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad 1949

  Melody Time 1948

  So Dear to My Heart 1948

  Fun & Fancy Free 1947

  Song of the South 1946

  Make Mine Music 1946

  Three Caballeros, The 1944

  Saludos Amigos 1943

  Victory Through Air Power 1943

  Bambi 1942

  Dumbo 1941

  Reluctant Dragon, The 1941

  Fantasia 1940

  Pinocchio 1940

  Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs 1937

Walt Disney Studios Animation

History of Walt Disney Animation

Animation historians love to say "It all started with a mouse". In fact it actually began with a visionary named Walt Disney.
From the early years in Kansas City with the likes of Ub Iwerks, Hugh Harmon and Rudy Ising. Walt Disney went on to become the single most important man in the history of animation. His legacy is a veritable who's who of animated characters; Snow White, Donald Duck, Pinocchio, Alice, Bambi, Cinderella, and of course, Mickey Mouse.
The Process of Animation
1. A storyboard is made, all the animators and directors come together to discuss the entire film.
2. The storyboards are presented as the story
3. Once the story is laid out, the dialogue is recorded. This is done before animation, so the animators know what the characters will say.
4. After the dialogue is recorded, the animators can make rough sketches of just the characters. Usually these drawings are quite messy, there is still no color, or background. Some animated films have used over 50,000 individual drawings.

At most animation studios, the best animators only sketched a few animation drawings, leaving gaps in between. Later on, a person called an "inbetweener" would finish the scenes, by drawing in between the areas that the animator had left.
5. Once the entire film has been drawn on paper, the animation drawings go to the inking department. There, the inkers copy the animation drawings on to a clear celluloid acetate, sometimes called a Cel.
6. After the outline of the characters has been made, the unfinished Cel's go to the Painting Department. The painters flip the Cel over, and paint the colors on the back. They paint on the back so the characters appear crisp, and have an outline.
7. Before the Animation Cels get photographed a background must be added. Because a Cel is clear, and it only has the painted character on it, if a background is made, it will show through. Usually backgrounds are painted with Tempera or Water Color paint. Although, in some Disney productions, the background was painted on glass, and combined with other glass painted backgrounds to create the illusion of extreme movement. (This technique is use in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.)
8. Now all the combined elements (the Cel and the background) can be photographed. Although, the final product is not filmed with a normal projector, or camera. A special device, with a lens mounted facing down on to a table top captures each frame of the animated feature. Usually, the background is placed into a special mount, then covered with the Cel, then covered with a large piece of glass, then photographed.
9. After all the drawings have been filmed, the dialogue is added. Sometimes the film is edited at this step.
10. The animated film is released, and the general public may view it.



 Information's collected from web
 Photographs on this page © Disney

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