Chaotic
Moderators: Víctor Paredes, Belgarath, slowtiger
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- Posts: 102
- Joined: Fri Sep 15, 2006 6:45 am
Chaotic
Has any one seen an animated series called "Chaotic" on any of the cable TV networks?
The style and method of animation looks like something that can be duplicated using Anime Studio Pro.
Anyone have any comments or opinions on this?
Thanks in advance,
Gustavo
The style and method of animation looks like something that can be duplicated using Anime Studio Pro.
Anyone have any comments or opinions on this?
Thanks in advance,
Gustavo
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- Posts: 102
- Joined: Fri Sep 15, 2006 6:45 am
I've been doing television production for over 15 years.
There's a common belief that equipment/technology/facilities are essential to success. While this statement has truth in it, it hides the much greater truth: WE alone are the greatest conduits to success.
It's not the sneakers that make a great basketball player.
Does he need them; are they essential? Yes. But are they also incidental? Yes!
Each of us has immeasurable ability.
-Craig
There's a common belief that equipment/technology/facilities are essential to success. While this statement has truth in it, it hides the much greater truth: WE alone are the greatest conduits to success.
It's not the sneakers that make a great basketball player.
Does he need them; are they essential? Yes. But are they also incidental? Yes!
Each of us has immeasurable ability.
-Craig
Craigar
- funksmaname
- Posts: 3174
- Joined: Tue May 29, 2007 11:31 am
- Location: New Zealand
Re: Chaotic
I try to watch Chaotic every Saturday when I get my cartoon fix.blacksunproject wrote:Has any one seen an animated series called "Chaotic" on any of the cable TV networks?
The style and method of animation looks like something that can be duplicated using Anime Studio Pro.
Anyone have any comments or opinions on this?
Thanks in advance,
Gustavo
I like its clean drawings, color schemes and visual effects. Are you saying that this is done in Anime Studio?
Last edited by banjar on Thu Jan 29, 2009 7:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
You are 100% right. But it also helps to have some cool software.Craigar wrote:I've been doing television production for over 15 years.
There's a common belief that equipment/technology/facilities are essential to success. While this statement has truth in it, it hides the much greater truth: WE alone are the greatest conduits to success.
It's not the sneakers that make a great basketball player.
Does he need them; are they essential? Yes. But are they also incidental? Yes!
Each of us has immeasurable ability.
-Craig
Hello all
Although AS Pro could and can do cutout animation style, it lacks a few tools like morphing to achieve all the tricks done in these productions, but it can do very close, look at greykid stuff for examples.
GC
Chaotic is done in Toonboom Digital Pro/Harmony (Chaotic - Grossology - Digata Defender - Ruby Gloom and many more )banjar wrote:Are you saying that this is done in Anime Studio?
Although AS Pro could and can do cutout animation style, it lacks a few tools like morphing to achieve all the tricks done in these productions, but it can do very close, look at greykid stuff for examples.
GC
Thanks for the info. Yeah, GreyKid creates some great stuff... a benchmark to work toward.GCharb wrote:Hello all
Chaotic is done in Toonboom Digital Pro/Harmony (Chaotic - Grossology - Digata Defender - Ruby Gloom and many more )banjar wrote:Are you saying that this is done in Anime Studio?
Although AS Pro could and can do cutout animation style, it lacks a few tools like morphing to achieve all the tricks done in these productions, but it can do very close, look at greykid stuff for examples.
GC
- kphgraphics
- Posts: 132
- Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:32 am
So can Toonboom Digital Pro achieve all the tricks done in these productions alone?GCharb wrote:Hello all
Chaotic is done in Toonboom Digital Pro/Harmony (Chaotic - Grossology - Digata Defender - Ruby Gloom and many more )banjar wrote:Are you saying that this is done in Anime Studio?
Although AS Pro could and can do cutout animation style, it lacks a few tools like morphing to achieve all the tricks done in these productions, but it can do very close, look at greykid stuff for examples.
GC
Harsh words but true never-the-less.slowtiger wrote:Who cares? Any professional production will use as much different software as it needs to get the job done. It's only the amateur who might be only able to afford one program who asks this question.can Toonboom Digital Pro achieve all the tricks done in these productions alone?
Being such a mean guy, I suppose that you are the wrong person to ask ... but I'll ask anyway.
Where can I buy that new software program that does everything and only requires a rough sketch and a single mouse click and only costs five dollars?
Eh, pulling my leg again, are you? *wg*Where can I buy that new software program that does everything and only requires a rough sketch and a single mouse click and only costs five dollars?
Seriously. No one could answer that question without a detailed description of what you actually want to do.
Anybody could create nice results with nearly any software - it only depends on your devotion to it, on your ability and willingness to learn, and of course on your very own creative input.
The thing with animation is that the principles you need to know are completely independant from the technique or software you use. Software only enables you to do certain tasks much faster or more comfortably. If the success of your project really depends on one certain SFX, I'd recommend you to go back to basic filmmaking 101. Most certainly the film would do without that FX, more likely the effect could be created good enough with what you have at hand, but most probably you have treated your subject with a wrong mindset, concentrating on the surface instead of basic storytelling and other important ingredients.
It is totally OK to have a love for special effects. But those people rarely do their own films.
Do you mean (OMG!!!!) it takes hard work and talent? Or if I don't have the talent or the ingenuity, then it takes hard work???? Writing good, basic stories that are interesting?slowtiger wrote: Anybody could create nice results with nearly any software - it only depends on your devotion to it, on your ability and willingness to learn, and of course on your very own creative input.
The thing with animation is that the principles you need to know are completely independant from the technique or software you use. Software only enables you to do certain tasks much faster or more comfortably. If the success of your project really depends on one certain SFX, I'd recommend you to go back to basic filmmaking 101. Most certainly the film would do without that FX, more likely the effect could be created good enough with what you have at hand, but most probably you have treated your subject with a wrong mindset, concentrating on the surface instead of basic storytelling and other important ingredients.
It is totally OK to have a love for special effects. But those people rarely do their own films.
You're joking, right?
Who needs to write stories? Why can't I just jump right in and start drawing like Daffy Duck? Daffy Duck always does interesting things and he never writes stories.
Whoa, lets not argue about advice now.
I agree with Slowtiger on this one though, any program will suffice. Heck here is what I did with paint, it took me like 45 minutes. And it's not a professional program.
http://viewmorepics.myspace.com/index.c ... 94677c477f
And don't be offended with Slowtigers comment, he is just a direct strait to the point type of person. If you need a constructive comment he's the one. Plus, foundations are necessary for the building of anything.
Eh, loss in quality, myspace's fault
I agree with Slowtiger on this one though, any program will suffice. Heck here is what I did with paint, it took me like 45 minutes. And it's not a professional program.
http://viewmorepics.myspace.com/index.c ... 94677c477f
And don't be offended with Slowtigers comment, he is just a direct strait to the point type of person. If you need a constructive comment he's the one. Plus, foundations are necessary for the building of anything.
Eh, loss in quality, myspace's fault
I love comments for they help me improve on my weaknesses.