Week 10 – Sleep? Maybe later.
This week we had another cool video diary detailing of a student workflow, this time by Matthew Garward. He’s married, has two kids and a full time job and still manages to find the time to do some amazing work at AM. Having recently entered the workforce myself (unfortunately in a position that is not animation related), I found his tips very worthwhile. Mostly he stressed that it was important to get as much done early, and not to procrastinate. Not only does this help if you’re schedule is full, but it gives the other students and your mentor a chance to see your work mid-week. His other secret? Don’t sleep very much. I decided to try it out myself, more out of necessity than anything else, and found that it makes the work days seem long, but it’s tolerable, and you can still get a good bit of animation done in the evening. The key is to make sure you don’t stay up so late you get dimishing returns, and hours go by while staring at the computer screen without any real work getting done. If that happens, it’s time to go to bed! My hat is off to you, Mr. MattG! To do this with a wife and kids as well as a job, you are truly a time management master!
Speaking of animation, this week we were supposed to have our assignment switched to spline. The first and last bits of mine are switched, with varying degrees of success, but I ended up reblocking some things in the middle, so they’re still in stepped for this week. This is the final week for this assignment, and I would really love to have a good, polished, demo reel quality piece coming out of it, so crits and comments are welcome as always.
Puke Animation, half-polished.
Cheers.
1 Comment
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Yo Will, your suff is good as always so, *insert random encouragement here*.
The only thing that bothers me is around frame 66 when he takes the step to the
shelf. I’m not sure why it bothers me, but one thing that may help is to leave
the left foot pointing toward the camera, instead of pointing at the cauldrin, so
it feels more like he dragged the foot a bit instead of took a regular step. Yeah
Maybe that’s it – I think it seems like he’s too close to need to take a step, it
seems more like a big reach would get him over to the shelf. So dragging the left
foot a bit might help. Maybe even twisting the hips more would help, since it
seems all the twist comes from the spine. Anyhow, I hope that helped. You
definetley improved the pose where he grabs his throat, it’s way better leaning
off to one side! Good work!
-john doublestein
Comment :: December 5, 2005 @ 110:06 pm