Cutout animation howto

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slowtiger
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Cutout animation howto

Post by slowtiger »

Yesterday I hopefully seduced someone into using Moho for cutout animation. They are total beginners, so some basic concepts need to be explained first: how to prepare stuff and get into Moho, which stuff ist suitable (resolution!), and then the Moho-related stuff like layers, keys, bones etc. I had a short look into some tutorial videos which crept up in a search: not directly wrong, but maybe a bit clumsy and not really to the point, and I'm not the type for videos anyway. I have a soft spot for this style and like to spread my knowledge about history, aesthetics and techniques. It's a style easily done with Moho Debut, which would be a good starting point for beginners.

So I wonder: do you think it would be worth the trouble to write a small book especially for cutout animation?
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cgrotke
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Re: Cutout animation howto

Post by cgrotke »

Yes! Cutouts are great, and there aren't many good books on the topic. I wouldn't limit the book to Debut, though.

I would guess that it would be popular due to the success of South Park.

One thing Moho can do nicely is keep all the cutouts flat, with no curling up under hot lights. : )
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GCharb
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Re: Cutout animation howto

Post by GCharb »

Cut-out animation has been around for a very long time, they used to call it limited animation, in tv series like the Flintstones, they used a glass plate to hold the pieces down so they don't curl or move !

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slowtiger
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Re: Cutout animation howto

Post by slowtiger »

I'm sorry, but limited animation is something completely different from cutout animation!

<teacher mode>
Limited animation is defined by breaking up a character into moving and not much moving parts, like a stand-still face and body with moving mouth and blinking eyes; and it's often relying on heavy re-use and cycling animation, think of Fred Flintstone running: alays the same run cycle in every episode. The parts were traced and painted traditionally on cels, which were punched and put on peg bars to assure registration. Aside from this assembly-line approach the drawings themseves could be as loose as usual.

Cutout animation at the core is cut-out parts being moved independently under the camera (with no registration). This was refined immediately by rigging parts with real joints (like a jumping jack, you can see that in some of the earliest silent films). The parts didn't transform or distort, but could be replaced by others. (Examples: "Monsieur Tête" (Jan Lenica) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odsIansn5Yk for the classical jerkiness, and of course "Hedgehog in the fog" (Yuri Norstein) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThmaGMgWRlY which often is named the pinnacle of what can be achieve with cutout animation.)

The main defining difference is the use of or absence of registration. Classic cutout animation may appear jerky for this reason. Limited animation breaks up characters into parts, but aims to create a smooth movement.

A technique often used in eastern europe, but also in france (René Laloux!), was to animate FBF on paper, colorize these drawing luxuriously, then cut out the characters and paste them on punched cels. Best known example would be "La planet sauvage" (Fantastic Planet). This approach doesn't count as cutout animation.

Of course with Moho we can have the best of both worlds in one: separated parts, exchange animation, freely animated or rigged, and everything is registered without the hassle of punching cels. The only thing missing would be the little signs of analogue filmmaking: paper outlines, little shadows, some dust, some reflections, and the occasional hand in the frame.
</teacher mode>
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Re: Cutout animation howto

Post by sang820 »

Hi, slow tiger
:shock: I think what you said is very necessary. Although [Paper Cuttings animation] is not difficult to achieve in the moho animation system, it needs to cross multiple software collaboration, and indeed needs an experienced and standardized process. Most of the Moho learners I know do not want to delve deeper into node modeling (sad), they only want to use Moho to quickly create animations, but they receive too little effective guidance.
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Wishing you all the best
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