tailieunhanh - Thumbnailing for Animation Thumbnails from a sequence of Disney’s Rescuers

When you itemize charges for conceptual services/preliminary art and finished art, your charges for the preliminary art are generally not taxable and your charges for the tangible finished art are generally taxable. The charge for the finished art should reasonably reflect the cost of creating the artwork plus a markup for profit. As noted earlier, be sure to describe charges for preliminary art as “design charges,”“preliminary art,”“concept development,” or another description that clearly indicates the charges are for the development and creation of preliminary designs. Lump-sum bill combining charges for preliminary and inished art There are two. | Thumbnailing for Animation Thumbnails from a sequence of Disney s Rescuers Preparing for Animation The Art of Thumbnailing PDF produced by 1 The Art of Thumbnailing Good animation begins with good planning. One of the first things an animator should do is thumbnail his scene. By thumbnailing we mean creating small quick drawings which provide a blueprint for the poses in the scene. By working small and rough the animator can try out a number of different poses and come up with the best approach to the scene before committing to animation. This is the stage where problems in staging and acting can be resolved. Once you have worked out the action at this small size it is easy to blow it up on the xerox machine and paste it up to start your scene. This set of notes shows a sequence from Disney s Rescuers where the animator has worked out his staging and action in a series of great thumbnails. PDF produced by Preparing for Animation The Art of Thumbnailing 2 PDF produced by Preparing for Animation The Art of Thumbnailing