Animation is a truly magnificent thing. It takes inanimate objects and brings them to life or with today's methods it can even create something completely from scratch which can appear amazingly real and lifelike. There have been many different types of animation over the years and they each change has happened because of new technological advances. These changes have also meant that the job of animators has also changed significantly.
Traditionally animators would have to draw out the images to be used in the video or film and they would then trace them and change certain parts of the image to create the illusion of movement. The animator would then have to trace each of the images again but onto acetate to create what are known as cels. The animator would then have to colour each of them. Parts of this process are still used now however the images are scanned into a computer programme to be altered.
Almost all animators today use computer programmes to create their animations and animators are taught to use these programmes when at university too. Although 3D animation is common today that wasn't always the case. It wasn't until stop motion became big that 3D animation became common. The animators had to model things out of clay or use existing objects and then move and alter them while taking photos of every movement and alteration. This process was very intricate and once again long for the animators.
To start with animators using computers would create animations using bitmaps and vectors to create 2D animations. The method was a lot faster for animators but after seeing 3D animation already, audiences wanted to see higher quality 3D animation and so not long after animators started creating computerised 3D animations.
3D animation is a huge and profitable industry today and has been used to create some of the most successful films. Animators still spend long amounts of time working on animations but they now spend them on a computer instead of sketching and tracing. Although it is faster to create animations now, they have become much more detailed which has again increased the process length.
Traditionally animators would have to draw out the images to be used in the video or film and they would then trace them and change certain parts of the image to create the illusion of movement. The animator would then have to trace each of the images again but onto acetate to create what are known as cels. The animator would then have to colour each of them. Parts of this process are still used now however the images are scanned into a computer programme to be altered.
Almost all animators today use computer programmes to create their animations and animators are taught to use these programmes when at university too. Although 3D animation is common today that wasn't always the case. It wasn't until stop motion became big that 3D animation became common. The animators had to model things out of clay or use existing objects and then move and alter them while taking photos of every movement and alteration. This process was very intricate and once again long for the animators.
To start with animators using computers would create animations using bitmaps and vectors to create 2D animations. The method was a lot faster for animators but after seeing 3D animation already, audiences wanted to see higher quality 3D animation and so not long after animators started creating computerised 3D animations.
3D animation is a huge and profitable industry today and has been used to create some of the most successful films. Animators still spend long amounts of time working on animations but they now spend them on a computer instead of sketching and tracing. Although it is faster to create animations now, they have become much more detailed which has again increased the process length.
About the Author:
Find out more about the Digital Animation with Illustration at Futureworks, Manchester.
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