![]() We're talking about pencils I love to draw with a color race red or a blue, and I like to animate with that. The other tools are pretty simple, like I just did a lesson. But let's talk about that's our pens and paper. ![]() You have to have that peg system, so that's super important. If I'm flipping it or looking at my animation drawings, it's never it's still staying locked down, and that is so ultimately important to doing any kind of subtlety animation. This was the whole reason was so that your paper then is locked in position. That's really important because, of course, that the paper needs to be pegs to match. So this is your peg system on the bottom. I don't even use my life tables kind of trained not to train to eyeball it. Usually there's a light like table underneath. But really, you can have a scaled down version of this, which is just a board. So first of all, this is my old Disney animation desk and like this is a nice, expensive version. But I just wanted to do this because I think that there's a lot of people that still want to know about this either from an educational standpoint or historical standpoint, or they just want to really do tooting hand drawn animation on a peg bars and a little bit so this sort of tip and trick that I'm doing right now, this lesson is all about how did draw and do hand drawn animation some of the tips and tricks that will kind of make you make it work better for you and a little bit of what everything is terminology to. But I'm still hand drawn, but I'm doing it on a way comes antique, using a program of some kind to help, you know, capture the images. That means that I'm animating on my sin teak and using my computer. I do a lot of tradition tread digital animation. ![]() A lot of guys don't need to know this because we don't do a lot of two D hand drawn animation anymore. Now, this is really kind of a throwback to I don't know, the eighties and nineties. I'm gonna teach you a little something about two D hand drawn animation. 2D Animation Tips & Tricks: I'm Tom Bancroft on today. You're gonna see me working on this desk, um, and creating some some animation, so enjoy this and thank you.ΔΆ. But then later on 12 years of Disney, I've kind of compiled all these tips and tricks together. These are things that I learned not only Cal Arts, the school I went to count for needs to the arts. That these tips and tricks, This is something. So we're gonna learn about timing and spacing and charting a lot of those things that were kind of things that we used in yesteryear but are still extremely used today, but also really good to know it will make make your animation so much better. All of these tips and tricks still relate to computer animation and to a lot of the traditional animations like like Enemy Adobe animate and things like that, because these are very much basics. And so, in this lesson, I'm gonna teach you a bunch of little hand drawn animation just like here on this old Disney animation desk, doing hand drawn, flipping and everything that kind of animation and this really is useful. It's gonna be It's called tooty, hand drawn tips and tricks. After that, we're done eight different feature films for Disney, including Milan, where I was able to design the character of Mushu the Dragon. I worked there for 12 different years, and then I also created to character design books. Introduction: I am Tom Bancroft, and I'm a former Disney animator. If it was me I'd put it on Sotheby's or better yet, Ebay.1. I mean, he couldnt go wrong by selling it for $1500. As I said before, I cannot tell by the photos if the desk is de-lamimated or worn (Probably worn from the animators elbows), so its hard to tell what has to be done to restore it to an aesthetically tolerable condition. These desks I've seen between $1500-$3000, but the last one I saw was in 2011 and that one went for $2200. Most of those I've seen average $2500-$5000. The last big one I saw, (by big I mean with shelves on both sides), started out at $1000 and ended up at $6000, but that one was a museum piece. After that it was a parade of the somewhat inferior but still cool Florida desks and tables, mostly between $800-$1500. Anyhow, saw a Burbank studio table, one of the big ones, WITH disc, very nice condition, go for $1500 about 8 years ago on Ebay. ![]() I am going to keep a close eye on those lamodern auctions. Wow, I wish I would have seen that auction.
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