1979 - Skating

1979

At long last, I’m pleased to announce the release of my short film, 1979!! A passion project that I’ve been working on for years, 1979 is a nostalgic look at young love all stop-motion animated using paper cutout puppets.

You can find more information here, or view it in all it’s glory on Vimeo.

Wylde Flowers

Wylde Flowers

Just released on Apple Arcade, I’m excited to announce Wylde Flowers! I have been animating on this game for almost two years and am thrilled and proud to have been part of the amazing team of developers. We had a great time creating this game and now release it into the “Wylde” for everyone to enjoy.

Wylde Flowers is a cozy life and farming sim with a witchy twist! Join Tara on a heartfelt journey to become a witch in Wylde Flowers. Farm by day, and cast spells by night as you craft your cottagecore life and bond with your coven. Come to know and love the fully voice-acted characters of Fairhaven, as you unravel a local mystery.

Download it here, or go to the Wylde Flowers web site to get more information and sign up for the newsletter.

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Animating a Talking Mask

In my 15 months working for OtherSide Entertainment on Underworld Ascendant, I created whole animation sets for at least 10 different characters and creatures.  There were undead skeletons, lizard men, ghosts, even a massive slug.  All fun stuff.

However, one of the tasks I enjoyed the most was making a static mask move as though it was speaking.  I love bringing simple, inanimate objects to life.  Plus, this gave me a very focused way to practice and study head movement during dialog.  I found it fascinating.

With over 4 minutes of dialog to animate and a limited time frame, I knew I had to be pretty efficient.  I didn’t want to just jump in and make it move around as though it was speaking.  I wanted to try to get across some of the sub-text of what Cabirus was saying as well as how he was speaking.

For me, that process always starts with recording myself delivering the lines.  I shot multiple takes of each phrase and then cherry-picked what I thought was the best performance, often editing clips together.  Click on the image above to view reference with the finished animation.

When animating, I quickly settled on a very different approach to my usual ‘pose-to-pose’ method.  Moving straightforward through the reference, I would key one transform at a pass.  That means that I would start by just keying the head translation in Z – to and away from the camera.  Then, separately, I keyed Z rotation (side to side tilt), Y rotation (twisting) and X (nodding).

At this point, I would stop to do a quick, overall polish pass.  I would push any extremes and adjust timing to give the performance as much life as possible, without going over the top.  I would also focus on making sure the nose and chin were following nice arcs.  I would wait to adjust the overall timing to better match the dialog until the very end so I could more easily follow the reference.

Then, I would key the Y and X translations – up and down, side to side.  These translations really helped give life to the mask and make it seem like maybe it wasn’t so disembodied after all.  Finally, I would slide the keys around a bit so the movement better matched and accentuated the dialog, punch things up a bit more and remove any sort of hiccups in the movement.

I found that by keying each transform individually, the masked moved more like our own heads do when we talk.  Sure, the movement is all coming from a single point, but not every rotation hits extremes at the exact same time.  Things are offset a bit.  By focusing on each one individually, the offsets are built right in to the initial animation and I could move quickly through the set  while still creating a good performance.

A seemingly simple task, but an enjoyable one and a great exercise in head movement.  I can’t wait to apply this technique to a talking head that’s actually attached to something.

Cheers!

The Not Starving Artist Podcast

I had a lovely chat with Angie Noll of The Not Starving Artist Podcast.  She normally interviews traditional artists, but when she talked to my wife a few weeks ago, Jacquie mentioned me and Angie thought I’d make an interesting guest.  Hopefully, I don’t disappoint.

We discuss how I got started in the animation industry, how I manage to keep my career going as a freelance animator as well as what my new company, NuHalu, is doing with mixed reality and character animation.

Have a listen!

Forward to the Past

I’m excited to let you know that my personal project, 1979, is now ready for production and up on Artella.com .  First, is the search for an illustrator to draw all of the characters in the music video.  Then it will be up to me to make the paper cutout puppets out of the drawings and then animate them.  It will be a completely different challenge for me, but this is an idea that’s been burning in me for a while, so I can’t wait to finally realize it.

You can follow the process here.

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FlexShopper T-Flex Holiday Spot

I had a great time working on this spot with Brickyard VFX.  It was up to me to take the dialog and action notes to break it up into shots, set the camera and action within each action, fine-tuning with feedback from Brickyard and the client.  Then, I got to work with the modeler/rigger on developing a strong rig that could be used for this and future spots.  I always take great pleasure in telling riggers what to do.

Last but certainly not least, was animating this fun, t-rex character.  It was a good challenge to determine how he should move and to strike a balance between realistic and cartoony.  As noted, I animated the first three T-Flex shots and Ed Hull animated the last two.

Enjoy!

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Hardees & Cheetos – Thickburger Spot

I have yet to try adding Cheetos to my hamburger, but I did have fun working on this spot.  Again, working as Lead for Brickyard and with the very talented animator, Ed Hull, we churned this one out in record time.  The most challenging shot, weird as it may seem, was Chester behind the bun rack and deciding what his reaction would be once he was revealed.  For some reason, we just couldn’t nail down the right response.  I’m happy with the one we ended up with.