I first started animating 10 years ago using the magic dot, and it is quite literally the best way to learn timing and spacing. It should be the first thing anyone does way before doing a ball bounce animation
yeah I thought the same thing. with the ball you have to focus on the volume what not while (at least in my opinion) timing and spacing is way more important and harder to get right than making sure the ball behaves realistically
I had an art teacher who always said "Practice makes permanent" as in if you practice something, you not only get better, you retain that knowledge forever. So if you stop drawing for years, but decide to pick up a pencil one day, you may not be the same, but all those foundations you practiced and learned will come back to you.
Or even for riding a bike. You ride it, and even if you go back to it after a while, you'll be speeding through after the first few paddles. Bcuz art and riding a bike, both are muscle memory
I think the sword to a rose is my favorite. Not only is it a beautiful animation but the animation between the two is complex and can impress your audience quite easily.
This kind of video is perfect for someone like me, who is an artist that knows about basic concepts of mass/shape, and terminology like keyframes and follow through, but has limited experience actually creating or finding an appropriate place to begin after a long time not creating. It doesn't seem so scary to pick back up now. Thanks, Alex!
I've been animating for almost 3 years now, and I haven't really had much experience from tutorials. But this, THIS is what's gonna make me better. I'll start simple, and then make more complex things. Thanks, Alex Grigg!
So far, these videos are great! They help focus on the lesson without daunting the student with a presentation that exudes mastery. By that, I mean that sometimes instructor's lessons make the student unconfident in their abilities through showing off their own skill in the lesson. And so I think this is a great balance that helps the student grasp, understand, and be excited for trying it out themselves. Thank you for your generous animation video lessons, ciao ciao!
Hey I'm glad you enjoy that. Keeping things simple and approachable was a big goal for me. Maybe I should do some more fancy animation to get people more inspired at some point...
Intro: 00:00 Magic Dot: 0:49 Jelly Jump: 3:34 More Difficult Jelly Jump: 7:28 The Switch: 7:41 The Morph: 12:09 Outro: 14:09 Useful tips at : 3:24 ; 7:15 Don't give up! I'm a hundred percent sure you'll become amazing at animation, just keep practicing! By the way, here's my favorite playlist to keep myself motivated: you're just happy (on yt) Happy Practice guys!
The "Bwoopr" sound you do when testing out your animation is definitely the most important lesson of all. Joke aside, amazing videos man, keep on the good work. 💪
you have a point though. Mostly animation is accompanied by sound effects, music, dialog or a combination of the three. which supports the animation and makes what's happening on screen more believable
What I love about this video is that it is very approachable and motivates me to try it out myself while most of the other channels provides animations which makes me second guess my interest in animation.
I’m a teen who’s learning animation, and these are really useful exercises! I’ve done a decent bit of animation before, some MAP parts, walk cycles, etc, but these seem like a great way to work on the fundamentals!
I'm not in high school yet, but I've been trying to figure out animation since 2nd Grade and I can say that these are awesome practices that I now do all the time. Thank you so much for showing them to me!
I'm about 3 months into a college animation program, and I think the magic dot is going to be a game changer for me. My profs started with bouncing balls and I just couldn't get the spacing through my head. The dots though are a simpler example that I think are really going to help me, thank you so much 😁
what an incredible guide!! I've always found animation pretty intimidating, so I usually keep my animations to motion graphics and keyframing pre-made assets, but this video breaks it down so nicely that I feel like just sitting down and drawing out some pretty loops!
My Summary of the vid :) # 1. Give a dot LIFE - Move it in arcs - Experiment with timing - Move it close and far from the camera? # 2. Jelly jump - Make some jelly bounce, practicing squash and stretch - You don’t have to draw every frame, can just move it - Add a 2nd jello on top to practice the objects’ interaction between each other # 3. The Switch - Hide a switch from two very different keyframes with motion - Jump or slide or something else? - Can also do it with a character to give it pzazz # 4. The Morph - Blend two very different keyframes with some interesting transition - You can get the most creative with this exercise (I personally think) - Use straight ahead mostly What can we do to make it interesting in the transitionary state? - Make it 3d for a moment - Gooey melt and twist transition - Add some effects - Add a different keyframe in the middle while it’s transforming - Add anticipation, timing, that good stuff
This is Fantastic!!! When I studied Traditional and 2D Digital Animation in College through VFS here in Canada we had intense pressure learning which takes so much more time because they push you to say nothing out (goes out) but perfection. Which makes it really hard on you when you're a creator that just wants to delve into it but now, Always Feel like you cannot put out anything but Perfection!!! Thanks for Encouraging that people *CAN* actually, keep it simple to animate for a less stressful positive experience! 🙌🏼🙏🏼
@@AlexGriggAnimation 🙏🏼 All Good I still Animate currently but now working on a lot and teaching it on my Channel so yah Not upset now about it but when I was a teenager learning it I sure was haha But we grow as humans and progress over time until the time is right! 👍🏼
I haven’t animated for years, and just got my hands on a new (well, new to me) animation program. The dots exercise is a perfect practice to get a handle of how to use layers and onion skins again, I appreciate how quick it is 👍
Thank you!! I’m not very good at animation, but I tried the magic dot exercise, with some motion blur and moving it closer or further away and I’m just so proud
For the jelly jump, I would put another overshoot when the jelly reaches the top to make it more squishy. That would also help add to the jello feel of it
When I was little I used my DSi's flipnote, and used this dot practice so often - I think it was pretty common on there for most kids to start off practicing this way which is really interesting to think about !
TBH this is one of the best tutorials on the internet. Presentation and the way you bring the information are fantastic Hopefully it won't take too much till we see more of your videos
Thank you! I've been teaching myself how to do 2d animation for the last couple years, and though I've gotten far enough to get my first couple freelance jobs, I still feel like I don't have as good of a grasp on it than I could. I couldn't find enough animation exercises that helped me figure out how to actually apply the rules and concepts within animation.
I have been confusedfor almost a month that how to start animation from scratch and i have started following your tutorials and have seen improvement a lot. You are a blessing for people like me who can't afford a animation collage. You are my master thanks you so much ♥ ☺
Your animation videos are great, we definitely need more people like you in the industry, your lessons are non threatening, they put me at ease and give me the confidence that with practice I’ll get better 😊
Your videos have been so helpful in developing fundamental animation skills. I have been animating all sorts of things in the past 13 years, but I've learned everything by myself and usually rely on my gut to make things feel right. Thank you for the knowledge boost.
I am so happy you made this! I couldn’t find many new beginner animation exercises, it was always the same stuff, you really filled a void in the animation community!!
Dude, you just helpend me unlock the hidden level in ADHD! I’m so excited!!! New title for a TedX-talk: how van we use animation principles to help with ADHD executive functions? Break it down into the poses!! Woohooo!
Thank you so much for this! This definitely validates my hatred of the bouncing ball, and my love for the magic dot, or the magic line, which is what I love to use. It feels so intuitive and free.
Brilliant. Ferb, I know what we're gonna do today. Or rather, after my exam session. Still, awesome materials, I never knew how to _practice_ animation instead of somehow magically trying to get it right in complicated projects ^^' now I feel more confident that in fact, I CAN learn it, and it won't take literal ages
YES! Thank you so much!!!! I have been wanting easy ideas to practice animation that are like this for me and a student of mine for so long!!! Granted I've been busy and haven't hunted around very much to find them but I'm so glad this video popped up!!!!
This just made something click for me, made me understand animation in ways I didn't fully put into practice earlier. Thank you very much for doing these tutorials!
I haven't had any Animation practice aside from a book my friend has gotten me, so this popping into my recommendations made it an immediate watch; with the content being an immediate sub. Thanks for the tips!
These are absolutely amazing. I love your videos, and I mean this with absolute sincerity. I never comment on videos, but as someone who has been struggling and has been wanting to learn animation for a very long time, your resources are brilliant. Please please keep up the good work. If you ever make a course, I’d buy it to support in a heartbeat.
@@marycynthiachisom4837 good question! I like to use FlipaClip on my phone (and I bought one of those special pencils that you can digitally draw with)
enjoyed this video so much, made me want to pick up 2D animation again, and also created in me a desire to be a teacher haha, this is so well thought of and executed and visually catching to the eye which def helps to want to try it out! subscribed
good video. never really learned animation through anyone(like a lot of people) but It was cool to see I did most of these already! This video makes me really want to try out morphing, since i haven't done that yet! :D
Thank you Alex! This tutorial has taken away my worries about ever being able to animate properly. Also: love your drawing style! Keep up the good work!
This helped me out so much. As an independent creator I don't have much of a budget to get things animated but with these I can get better at animations which I sort of jumped into before but dropped.
I've haven't animated in a bit and when I watched other classes with animations it makes it look so complicated especially when I don't understand. But I'm so happy you explained this in a more simpler way to where it doesn't look so scary! THANKS!
Oh my god it's surreal seeing the Switch in action, I feel like I've seen animation like that SO MUCH in games, stuff like Binding of Isaac comes to mind, but if you asked me to replicate it I would have been completely lost before now. Man, that's _crazy_ how a tiny bit of motion tricks your brain into seeing a "smoother" transformation where there just plain isn't one
I started animation around 9ish months ago, and I have never heard of these Exercises! I started ill definitely try them out, especially the magic dot and morph one!
I watched this video out of boredom, randomly, and I'm already into animation and want to become better at it. Instant sub, everything you said here was understandable and clear :) Also you only have 8 videos and they're SO good! Did you run a channel before?
Its such simple concepts, to learn the basics begin with giving life to a simple dot, and yet youre the first ive ever seen bring it up! Youve taught the literal basics of the basics lol and i hope more people come across your video, even if they themselves dont want to be animators :) sending a link to all my friends
Thank you so much for making these! Phantom Limb continues to be one of my favorite animated shorts. I still think about. I love your work and, especially, your animation style
Today I finally tried the exercises in the video (dots, jelly and switch) and it was mind-blowing for me, I am barely exaggerating. It is so simple yet I see how the motion works, the idea of pacing, how with just one drawing that you copy, paste and transform can move... I always wanted to try animation/animatics but it looks so "big", with the understanding of movement, planning/storyboarding, drawing... These tips showed me that sometimes simple things work best, and it overall made everything less scary. Maybe I will try more things, and I will for sure watch more videos. Thank you :)
I first started animating 10 years ago using the magic dot, and it is quite literally the best way to learn timing and spacing. It should be the first thing anyone does way before doing a ball bounce animation
I totally agree. It's such a quick way to discover the joy of animating
@@AlexGriggAnimation its really nice
yeah I thought the same thing. with the ball you have to focus on the volume what not while (at least in my opinion) timing and spacing is way more important and harder to get right than making sure the ball behaves realistically
I'm not gonna ruin the amount of likes
Whoa
I had an art teacher who always said "Practice makes permanent" as in if you practice something, you not only get better, you retain that knowledge forever. So if you stop drawing for years, but decide to pick up a pencil one day, you may not be the same, but all those foundations you practiced and learned will come back to you.
That's a cool saying :). Definitely rings true
i can confirm, i stopped drawing for about a year and came back and impressed myself.
Muscle memory
Kinda
Or even for riding a bike.
You ride it, and even if you go back to it after a while, you'll be speeding through after the first few paddles.
Bcuz art and riding a bike, both are muscle memory
I think the sword to a rose is my favorite. Not only is it a beautiful animation but the animation between the two is complex and can impress your audience quite easily.
Same! I found it extremely cool!
True, it morphs so beautifully and effortlessly
This kind of video is perfect for someone like me, who is an artist that knows about basic concepts of mass/shape, and terminology like keyframes and follow through, but has limited experience actually creating or finding an appropriate place to begin after a long time not creating. It doesn't seem so scary to pick back up now. Thanks, Alex!
I've been animating for almost 3 years now, and I haven't really had much experience from tutorials. But this, THIS is what's gonna make me better. I'll start simple, and then make more complex things. Thanks, Alex Grigg!
So far, these videos are great! They help focus on the lesson without daunting the student with a presentation that exudes mastery. By that, I mean that sometimes instructor's lessons make the student unconfident in their abilities through showing off their own skill in the lesson. And so I think this is a great balance that helps the student grasp, understand, and be excited for trying it out themselves. Thank you for your generous animation video lessons, ciao ciao!
Hey I'm glad you enjoy that. Keeping things simple and approachable was a big goal for me. Maybe I should do some more fancy animation to get people more inspired at some point...
@@AlexGriggAnimation you are doing great job 😍
Love the italian (im italian)
Intro: 00:00
Magic Dot: 0:49
Jelly Jump: 3:34
More Difficult Jelly Jump: 7:28
The Switch: 7:41
The Morph: 12:09
Outro: 14:09
Useful tips at : 3:24 ; 7:15
Don't give up! I'm a hundred percent sure you'll become amazing at animation, just keep practicing!
By the way, here's my favorite playlist to keep myself motivated: you're just happy (on yt)
Happy Practice guys!
Did he used 24 frames in jelly jump?
This comment makes me happy
thx ❤
Thx
The "Bwoopr" sound you do when testing out your animation is definitely the most important lesson of all. Joke aside, amazing videos man, keep on the good work. 💪
Haha yeh I make sounds like that a fair bit while I animate. Cheers!
you have a point though. Mostly animation is accompanied by sound effects, music, dialog or a combination of the three. which supports the animation and makes what's happening on screen more believable
What I love about this video is that it is very approachable and motivates me to try it out myself while most of the other channels provides animations which makes me second guess my interest in animation.
Hey that's so nice to hear shruthi
I’m a teen who’s learning animation, and these are really useful exercises! I’ve done a decent bit of animation before, some MAP parts, walk cycles, etc, but these seem like a great way to work on the fundamentals!
Me too!
Hey same!
Same😊😊😊
Same!
ngl i clicked on this bc the thumbnail was funny but ty this is very useful
same
I'm not in high school yet, but I've been trying to figure out animation since 2nd Grade and I can say that these are awesome practices that I now do all the time. Thank you so much for showing them to me!
I probably started 3 or 4 grade on flipaclip, now I'm in middle school making a whole series on krita
@@burgersfrompigs Nice! I'm still Flipaclip all the way (with the occasional edition of Capcut)
I'm about 3 months into a college animation program, and I think the magic dot is going to be a game changer for me. My profs started with bouncing balls and I just couldn't get the spacing through my head. The dots though are a simpler example that I think are really going to help me, thank you so much 😁
Awesome to hear! Start every day with a magic dot and you'll pick up so much!
@@AlexGriggAnimationok, so I start every day with a magic dot. I'll learn how to animate better?
@@Butter-Production I think so :)
@@AlexGriggAnimation OK going to do a dot rn I guess
@@Butter-Production How's your progress?
*sees thumbnail* “Y’now, I should probably check this out.
Just got a PC and I’ve been absolutely invested in your animation course thank you so much for making these videos💛💛💛
You're very welcome!
I was just trying to learn animation tips but I was tired and already laying down and your voice is very soothing and I fell asleep whilw watching 💀
what an incredible guide!! I've always found animation pretty intimidating, so I usually keep my animations to motion graphics and keyframing pre-made assets, but this video breaks it down so nicely that I feel like just sitting down and drawing out some pretty loops!
My Summary of the vid :)
# 1. Give a dot LIFE
- Move it in arcs
- Experiment with timing
- Move it close and far from the camera?
# 2. Jelly jump
- Make some jelly bounce, practicing squash and stretch
- You don’t have to draw every frame, can just move it
- Add a 2nd jello on top to practice the objects’ interaction between each other
# 3. The Switch
- Hide a switch from two very different keyframes with motion
- Jump or slide or something else?
- Can also do it with a character to give it pzazz
# 4. The Morph
- Blend two very different keyframes with some interesting transition
- You can get the most creative with this exercise (I personally think)
- Use straight ahead mostly
What can we do to make it interesting in the transitionary state?
- Make it 3d for a moment
- Gooey melt and twist transition
- Add some effects
- Add a different keyframe in the middle while it’s transforming
- Add anticipation, timing, that good stuff
thank you!
been having a hard time making the morph work, thanks for the tips!
Thanks!
This is Fantastic!!! When I studied Traditional and 2D Digital Animation in College through VFS here in Canada we had intense pressure learning which takes so much more time because they push you to say nothing out (goes out) but perfection.
Which makes it really hard on you when you're a creator that just wants to delve into it but now, Always Feel like you cannot put out anything but Perfection!!! Thanks for Encouraging that people *CAN* actually, keep it simple to animate for a less stressful positive experience! 🙌🏼🙏🏼
Hey I'm glad you found it helpful:) sorry that your first experience with learn animation was so stressful
@@AlexGriggAnimation 🙏🏼 All Good I still Animate currently but now working on a lot and teaching it on my Channel so yah Not upset now about it but when I was a teenager learning it I sure was haha But we grow as humans and progress over time until the time is right! 👍🏼
I haven’t animated for years, and just got my hands on a new (well, new to me) animation program. The dots exercise is a perfect practice to get a handle of how to use layers and onion skins again, I appreciate how quick it is 👍
I've watched a lot of beginner animation guides. How is this the fist time I've seen most of these techniques? Thanks Alex, this was really helpful!
Simple and effective tutorial aside. The whole video itself is just so enjoyable to watch even for non-animator!
Thank you!! I’m not very good at animation, but I tried the magic dot exercise, with some motion blur and moving it closer or further away and I’m just so proud
For the jelly jump, I would put another overshoot when the jelly reaches the top to make it more squishy. That would also help add to the jello feel of it
Yes! If I was to do it again I would add another bounce. Actually I did that for the YT shorts version that I'm yet to release. Cheers :)
When I was little I used my DSi's flipnote, and used this dot practice so often - I think it was pretty common on there for most kids to start off practicing this way which is really interesting to think about !
TBH this is one of the best tutorials on the internet. Presentation and the way you bring the information are fantastic
Hopefully it won't take too much till we see more of your videos
Glad it was helpful! Haha yeh these take a lot of work to make so I'm not going to be a daily uploader anytime soon :)
@@AlexGriggAnimation
Weekly :') ?
You're literally a gift for beginners out there!
Thank you! I've been teaching myself how to do 2d animation for the last couple years, and though I've gotten far enough to get my first couple freelance jobs, I still feel like I don't have as good of a grasp on it than I could. I couldn't find enough animation exercises that helped me figure out how to actually apply the rules and concepts within animation.
The Thumbnail « can bounce balls! »
I have been confusedfor almost a month that how to start animation from scratch and i have started following your tutorials and have seen improvement a lot.
You are a blessing for people like me who can't afford a animation collage.
You are my master thanks you so much ♥ ☺
Your animation videos are great, we definitely need more people like you in the industry, your lessons are non threatening, they put me at ease and give me the confidence that with practice I’ll get better 😊
Your videos have been so helpful in developing fundamental animation skills. I have been animating all sorts of things in the past 13 years, but I've learned everything by myself and usually rely on my gut to make things feel right. Thank you for the knowledge boost.
No balls? 🥺
I hope you have two if you're a male
😭
NOO BALLLS😭😭😭
*vine boom*
🥺😭😭😭
I am so happy you made this! I couldn’t find many new beginner animation exercises, it was always the same stuff, you really filled a void in the animation community!!
Haven't animated and years and I'm already excited after these lessons, keep up the amazing work!
Dude, you just helpend me unlock the hidden level in ADHD! I’m so excited!!!
New title for a TedX-talk: how van we use animation principles to help with ADHD executive functions? Break it down into the poses!! Woohooo!
Thank you so much for this! This definitely validates my hatred of the bouncing ball, and my love for the magic dot, or the magic line, which is what I love to use. It feels so intuitive and free.
Brilliant. Ferb, I know what we're gonna do today.
Or rather, after my exam session. Still, awesome materials, I never knew how to _practice_ animation instead of somehow magically trying to get it right in complicated projects ^^' now I feel more confident that in fact, I CAN learn it, and it won't take literal ages
these are amazing explanations and i enjoyed the animations you made :) the flower-dagger pair is stuck in my head, it's beautiful!
Thanks Mary :)
don't know why but as an animator, this vid makes me happy and inspired
Your videos are some of the best animation tutorials I've seen! Concise, interesting, and original. Thank you for making them! 😃
Thanks! really needed^^ keep fight! i'm from beginner about basic animation.
YES! Thank you so much!!!! I have been wanting easy ideas to practice animation that are like this for me and a student of mine for so long!!! Granted I've been busy and haven't hunted around very much to find them but I'm so glad this video popped up!!!!
This just made something click for me, made me understand animation in ways I didn't fully put into practice earlier. Thank you very much for doing these tutorials!
tysmmm ❤ i lost motivation in animating because i was trying really complex stuff and got annoyed when it didn’t work, but this really helps :)
But I love b-
My 8 yr old just watched your video and was crushing it in real time with these newly learned concepts. Presented super well. Thanks!
this warms my heart. Any advice for making videos that continue to appeal to your 8yr old?
Thank you! I will use these when I feel stuck! And I might use the morph exercise for my animation portfolio!
Great work!
The thumbnail is so insane ooc I love it
man for long time i was looking to improve my animation. thank you alexx for showing this exercises, definetly gonna practice it
This is by far the most helpful animation tutorial I have ever seen! Thank you!
“NO BOUNCING BALLS?”
🤨
balls
this video is so useful now i know how to animate and it turns out really good
You inspire me to animate again. I enjoy it, but it has been exhausting lately. It'd be nice to make some personal animations.
the thumbnail 💀
Fr
I haven't had any Animation practice aside from a book my friend has gotten me, so this popping into my recommendations made it an immediate watch; with the content being an immediate sub. Thanks for the tips!
These are absolutely amazing. I love your videos, and I mean this with absolute sincerity. I never comment on videos, but as someone who has been struggling and has been wanting to learn animation for a very long time, your resources are brilliant. Please please keep up the good work. If you ever make a course, I’d buy it to support in a heartbeat.
These are incredible! I've just started out as an animator (about 8 months ago) and this has really helped. Thanks for another great upload!
Which animation app do you use , I’m just a beginner with zero knowledge 😢
@@marycynthiachisom4837 good question! I like to use FlipaClip on my phone (and I bought one of those special pencils that you can digitally draw with)
My favorite exercise animation is the magic dot and the switch.
enjoyed this video so much, made me want to pick up 2D animation again, and also created in me a desire to be a teacher haha, this is so well thought of and executed and visually catching to the eye which def helps to want to try it out! subscribed
i'm not an animator and i'm probably never going to be, but this is wonderful, i just love watching your content
absolutely top shelf stuff, thank you very much!!❤
Bro ur a animation god thank u .u got no clue how much this helped us beginner
Man not gonna lie just yesterday i was wondering what the hell i am going to animate next for practice!! this video helps so much,, You are awesome
Can't wait to see what you make :)!
Im learning animation 3 weaks ago and I've improving so good and fast,thx for your videos i watch all of them
The thumbnail caught me off guard 💀
same lmao
I’m not even an animator, but boy you’re really selling it to me now
good video. never really learned animation through anyone(like a lot of people) but It was cool to see I did most of these already! This video makes me really want to try out morphing, since i haven't done that yet! :D
WAIT
NO BOUNCING BALLS?!
WHAT THE HELL!?
I’m so glad this popped up for me! Love these exercise ideas as someone who is looking to get back into animating small things.
So nobody at all is going to talk about the thumbnail
no bouncing WHAT.
Thank you Alex! This tutorial has taken away my worries about ever being able to animate properly. Also: love your drawing style! Keep up the good work!
"no more bouncing balls?"
I just LOVE your animating style and art style, it’s so good.
This helped me out so much. As an independent creator I don't have much of a budget to get things animated but with these I can get better at animations which I sort of jumped into before but dropped.
I've haven't animated in a bit and when I watched other classes with animations it makes it look so complicated especially when I don't understand. But I'm so happy you explained this in a more simpler way to where it doesn't look so scary! THANKS!
Oh my god it's surreal seeing the Switch in action, I feel like I've seen animation like that SO MUCH in games, stuff like Binding of Isaac comes to mind, but if you asked me to replicate it I would have been completely lost before now. Man, that's _crazy_ how a tiny bit of motion tricks your brain into seeing a "smoother" transformation where there just plain isn't one
“no bouncing balls”💀💀💀
DUDE ! i tried sooo many animation tipps and technikes and this is the only one that works !
THANK YOU
No more bouncy balls!?!???
The thing on the thumbnail is the epitome of middle school humor
bruh that thumbnail though 🤨📸
Grow up
Love your teaching style---hoping you will run a Black Friday sale on your Animation Basecamp!
the image 💀
Practice makes progress is what I like to say
"no bouncing balls?" 💀💀the thumbnail is wild 💀
I started animation around 9ish months ago, and I have never heard of these Exercises! I started ill definitely try them out, especially the magic dot and morph one!
Tried em out! It worked well!
whos watching this and is not an animator?
No one😊
Why did you click on the video
@@altozgflol
Why r u guys so upset lol. People can learn new things and not do it. Take school work for example
not professionally
I watched this video out of boredom, randomly, and I'm already into animation and want to become better at it.
Instant sub, everything you said here was understandable and clear :)
Also you only have 8 videos and they're SO good!
Did you run a channel before?
Its such simple concepts, to learn the basics begin with giving life to a simple dot, and yet youre the first ive ever seen bring it up! Youve taught the literal basics of the basics lol and i hope more people come across your video, even if they themselves dont want to be animators :) sending a link to all my friends
put the megamind picture instead of the skeletons in the thumbnail 💀
💀
@@argkxl ikr
Omg that dot animation is life changing - the possibilities are endless. Can't wait to try it
No bouncing balls 😭😭
Thank you so much for making these! Phantom Limb continues to be one of my favorite animated shorts. I still think about. I love your work and, especially, your animation style
The thimbnail is the reason I clicked this video
Ayo 😂
My favorite practice is blinking eyes and butterflies flying. They can actually be changed up quite a bit to try many things
No bouncy balls 💀
*sees thumbnail*
ಠ_ಠ what
Today I finally tried the exercises in the video (dots, jelly and switch) and it was mind-blowing for me, I am barely exaggerating. It is so simple yet I see how the motion works, the idea of pacing, how with just one drawing that you copy, paste and transform can move... I always wanted to try animation/animatics but it looks so "big", with the understanding of movement, planning/storyboarding, drawing... These tips showed me that sometimes simple things work best, and it overall made everything less scary. Maybe I will try more things, and I will for sure watch more videos. Thank you :)
No Balls
[[VINEBOOM]]