which I would really have liked to know more about. what am I missing here? Is this "X Effects" thing really as complicated as it seems?ģ: Along those same lines, if I can only draw to the very edge of the frame, how can I make a background big enough to pan or zoom out from, or how can I start an animation off screen that enters the frame?Īnyway, while TVPaint seems to have the most bells and whistles and over all options, I'm very daunted by the fact that it's not nearly as intuitive as some other programs, the manual doesn't seem to be wonderfully easy to understand (I found the section on B Splines. Not only did it not make much sense to me, but I didn't see how you could do more arced (circular) type of moves, as opposed to just straight lines. I read up on it in the manual a bit, but it still didn't quite make sense to me. panning and such, and I'm finding the process very clinical.
#Toon boom harmony student dosnt have bitmap and vector how to
Will a 2 to 2.4GHZ, 2gigs RAM, Intel Macbook suffice, or would a film size project run very slowly even on that? Or would working at HDTV resolution be a better idea, and then having it upconverted to film later be a better idea? That said, would HDTV resolution work without much lag on the set-up I previously mentioned.Ģ: I've been trying to read up on how to do multi-plane camera effects. I have a few questions about TVPaint that I'm really hoping someone can answer for me:ġ: Is the processing power it would take to work on a film resolution size project (this is one of the things I'm torn on between going with a bimap program like TVPaint, or a Vector based one like Toon Boom). My choices are: TVPaint, Toon Boom Digital Pro, and Flipbook Pro. I'm currently trying to decide between 3 different programs to animate a feature film.