9 Volt Snap Lights
Bargain LED flashlight
Tools (Recommended):
Lixada Blocklite
PAK-LITE Super Glow LED Flashlight
Tools (Other):
Blocklite 2.0
(Cool Tools has a YouTube channel with many more tool reviews — editors)
Tools (Recommended):
Lixada Blocklite
PAK-LITE Super Glow LED Flashlight
Tools (Other):
Blocklite 2.0
(Cool Tools has a YouTube channel with many more tool reviews — editors)
A cool tool can be any book, gadget, software, video, map, hardware, material, or website that is tried and true. All reviews on this site are written by readers who have actually used the tool and others like it. Items can be either old or new as long as they are wonderful. We post things we like and ignore the rest. Suggestions for tools much better than what is recommended here are always wanted.
Tell us what you love.I have no words for the depth of this master class in visual animation. This is the definitive source for learning how to perform -- as in act -- by drawing; how to create emotion with a series of subtly modified images. There’s lots involved in animation these days: this book is focused on a single thing: teaching you how to make animated movement come alive. Make a stick figure walk cautiously. A table lamp cower with fear. A robin soar. A car that makes you cry. Hundreds of tutorial illustrations show you how. Applies as much, or more, to digital animation as to pencil drawings. KK
This is a very cool application that creates stop-motion and time-lapse videos. For years my kids and I have been making claymation episodes, doll and figure animations, paper cutout sequences, and fun time-lapse movies with our family handy-cam, but our primitive method of simply blinking the on-button has always been less than satisfactory. Our brain-dead way creates three problems: the interval is too long (jerky movement), you can’t see what motion should be next, and you can’t edit out goofs when you make a boo-boo — which is 100% certain.
iStopMotion software is a much better way to do animation, and it solves all three problems. You connect a live video feed from your camera to your computer (via USB or Firewire) and then you control the film from your keyboard — or this is cool — via voice command! After you capture a frame, the program overlays that frame as transparent layer over the current camera view so you can see exactly where you need to move next. You can even request the last 5 frames (onion skinning animators call it) to get a sense of direction and trajectory, which allows a very fine tuning of the motion. And you can edit mistakes, and do redos on the fly. All this is simple enough that my 7-year-old could instantly manage it. Yet it is sophisticated enough that film students use this software for thesis projects. Making time-lapse films is even easier.
The joy of this tool is that your computer screen rather than your camera screen drives the animation. To overcome the downside that you need to do all your filming within cable reach of your laptop iStopMotion now comes as a phone app, too, so you can view your work on your mobile. There’s also an iPad version for filming with this tablet (which needs to be steady). All are aimed at letting kids do animation quickly. But its good enough for slow adults like me.
There are three programs in this genre. I’ve tried all three (iStopMotion, FrameThief, and Stop-Motion Studio) and iStopMotion is by far the superior. It has the most features, ease of use, speed and stability. It is also the best designed. — KK
All films will become animations. That prediction is based on the rate at which special effects become standard effects in big-budget films. Even a “live action” movie these days is composed frame by frame, and the skills and logic of animation take over. An ordinary digital camera, a hi-end PC or Mac, with iMovie software or equivalent, gives anyone the tools to do cinematic animation without tears. The Complete Animation Course is the best of many recent books riding the re-newed popularity of animated films. This guide is a great how-to orientation for making your own animated film using affordable technology. It introduces you to classic animation basics, and the many methods which combine old fashioned techniques (cartoon, paper collages, claymation) with computer based tools. I found it had just the right level of detail — sufficient to get you going without bogging down in how to do what’s already been done.
Twelve Principles of Animation
These are not hard and fast rules, but they have been found to work since the early days of animation. Bear them in mind at the storyboard stage and your animation will definitely have more fluidity and believability.
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