Tuesday, July 05, 2011

The Adult Swim Talking Eyeball Mascot

Imagine my delight when Adult Swim approached me and asked if I could create a talking eyeball for them.





I was experimenting with animating various ways in Harmony, sometimes using keyframing and digital tricks but it was more fun drawing the animation straight ahead like this.
Once I had my rough layout poses registered in Harmony, I just went ahead and drew each animation drawing one at a time.
I just kept scrubbing the sound track and matching the drawings to the accents in the dialogue.
The brush tool is pretty easy to use and I didn't worry about making mistakes because I could play each bit of animation back instantly to see if it worked.
If something didn't work right, instead of trying to draw over it and fix a certain drawing and ending up with a scribbly mess, I just deleted it and drew another from scratch.


What's fun about animating this way is that as you start to get comfortable with a scene, you get braver too.

You can see how conservative the scene starts out as I was a chicken Willie worried that I might get caught having fun.










Once I figured out how easy it is to just delete something and redraw it I started to get a little more exaggerated as I went along. No one was looking over my shoulder except my assistant Tommy, who couldn't fire me for not tracing model sheets, though he probably wanted to.





I was surprised by no matter how much I distorted the drawings and how few inbetweens I used I still was able to get the animation to play smoothly.
It kinda made me mad that I didn't go further.
















I actually animated the nose before I animated the eye and I used keys and inbetweens, and that didn't turn out as smooth.
It looks more start and stop or pose to pose like most TV cartoons.



I think the great thing about being able to animate so fast and playing it back as you go, that you naturally become more confident and daring.
If I could get enough animators to do this, it wouldn't be long before the way cartoons moved would be a lot freer and inventive.
We might stop thinking of character designs as "assets" to be artificially manipulated like puppets around the screen.





I'm hoping this eyeball will become Adult Swim's Tony the Tiger or Kim Kardasian's butt. If not, I'll have to create some animated ear convolutions next.

I did use some sneaky digital animation tricks in this spot too, like keyframing and even morphing for Cripe's sake. I can post some of that crap too if you are curious.

BTW, if you wanna use Harmony yourself, I suggest you buy Animate or Animatepro first. They do the same things as Harmony but are more affordable. Harmony is really for studios, not individuals.

Monday, July 04, 2011

Happy 4th From The Ultimate American

Not me, but George Liquor who represents the highest pinnacle of iconic Americanism.
George is my tribute to the American spirit and culture that I think was at its most influential and impressive in the mid-2oth century.
He is an ultra conservative that enjoys the freedom, innovations, easy living and cultural achievements of a nation forged and built upon by generations of radical thinkers, inventors, entertainers and meat processors. Like Jim Smith, radical cartoonist who drew some of these pictures.
George is completely free to complain about the types of folks who gave him the world he enjoys. He lives a comfortable suburban life but is also able to escape to a more rugged pioneering American ideal from time to time.




http://johnkstuff.blogspot.com/2009/04/george-liquor-outdoorsman.html

He has a solid muscular granite like head (here produced by famous Puppeteer Craig Marin).



Like all real Americans, George feels it's his duty to protect the next generation from the corrupting influences of creeping decadence and the latest rash of radical ideas.
One harmful influence on American youth is of course, the Canadian female. Being extra robust and healthy due to the unfair advantage of free health for all, she uses her lustful wiles to spread socialist ideas to decent but less healthy Americans who believe that if God has chosen to bless you with disease, it is your unalienable right to rot away quietly in honor of His generous gift of individuality.





All you lovers of comic books that promote American ideals will be happy to know that the Spumco Comic Books of the decadent mid 90s are being reprinted in hardcover form by that mogul of comic publishers, Craig Yoe.
I made Craig promise to print the colors truer to the original files too. The comics were originally printed too dark and that always fried my eyeballs.We'll also include some comics that have never been printed. "Nutty The Friendly Dump" drawn by Vincent Waller tells a story of American sentiment and family trials.
It's chock full of pathos and heart.


Anyway, Happy 4th of July from a Canadian who loves his own country and its best neighbor the United States Of America.


MORE GOD-FEARING CARTOON STORIES OF PATRIOTISM

http://johnkstuff.blogspot.com/2008/10/george-liquor-show-preview.html

Friday, July 01, 2011