The bouncing ball includes many aspects of animation that an animator uses everyday in every scene on which he works. Animation principles such as the path of action, arcs, momentum, timing, key drawings, inbetween drawings, weight, speed, and the substance of an object are included in this simple exercise.
STEP 1 |
Let's begin by drawing a path of action from left to right. This is the path the ball will follow. Remember to stay "ruff" and "loose" with your drawings. As is the case with most animation, our path of action is made up of ARCS. TIP: Most objects, characters, etc. move in ARCS and NOT in straight lines. |
STEP 2 |
Next we will plan the timing of the ball along our path of action. Draw tick marks. This will help us figure out the positions (on the arc) of the ball and the timing of the bounce. Tick marks at the beginning (the top of the arc) are close together; as the ball heads down, the tick marks become further and further apart. |
The action at the beginning of an arc is called a "slo-in". Once the ball hits - it looses a little momentum and then slows down (slo-out) as it approaches the top of the next arc.
TIP: Think of a ball rolling down a hill. It gains speed. Now we have created a guide for our timing.
STEP 3 |
NOTE: Drawing #7 is where the ball makes contact, or impacts with the ground. #7 is the "squash" drawing, i.e., where we show the illusion of weight or impact of the object (3a).
TIP: The illusion of weight is very important. To maintain the integrity of the ball, be sure to maintain the same volume in drawing #7 (even though it is "squashed") as you have in drawings #1 and 13. Also, the faster the object, character, etc. moves, the more "squash" you have when it hits.
STEP 4 |
Next we add the breakdown drawings (#6 and #8). "Breakdowns" are really inbetween drawings which help describe the action. These drawings (known as "inbetweens" or "tweens") are the drawings between the pose or key drawings. In the hiarchy of animation, first you do the key drawings (or keys), next the breakdowns, and finally any further inbetween drawings needed to smooth out the action. The breakdowns for the bouncing ball show the illusion of speed. These are the "stretch" drawings. The stretch(speed) and squash(weight) drawings are relative to each other. Generally, if you have a lot of squash, you have a lot of stretch, too.
TIP: Notice that the ball goes from stretch directly to squash and back to stretch (# 6, #7, #8) with no "transition drawings". This gives snap to the ball's bounce.
STEP 5 |
Finally, we draw in the rest of the inbetweens - #2 to #5; and #9 to #12. Notice that as the ball falls, the shape "transitions" from a round ball to more and more of an eliptical or stretched shape. |
- Start with a PATH OF ACTION.
- Plan your TIMING with tick marks on the PATH OF ACTION.
- Ruff in the key drawings.
- Use SQUASHED drawings to create the illusion of weight, contact.
- Use STRETCHED drawings to create the illusion of speed.
- Do your key drawings (or key poses) first, then do the breakdowns and finally the inbetweens.
- SLO-IN (transition drawings)builds momentum.
- SLO-OUT (transition drawings)reduces momentum.
- Most objects, characters, etc. move in ARCS and NOT in straight lines.
- If something moves slowly, the tick marks are close together; if it moves quickly, the marks are further apart.
- Whether you squash or stretch, a drawing ALWAYS keep the volumes consistent from shape to shape.
- Always TRANSITION the round drawing into the stretched drawing.
- No transitions from stretch to squash to stretch.
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