Traditional Animation: Composition, Rhythm and Camera
Painted I
A course by Ezequiel Torres , Animator
About the video: Painted I
Overview
“We will paint all the frames of the animation and we will obtain a render of the transformed shot, to a format that will be used to upload to social networks.”
In this video lesson Ezequiel Torres addresses the topic: Painted I, which is part of the Domestika online course: Traditional Animation: Composition, Rhythm and Camera. Learn techniques and tricks to create smooth and original animation sequences.
Partial transcription of the video
“We already finished with the "clean up" of the shot. Now let's paint the frames. Now I'm going to start painting. The first thing I'm going to do is remove the colors that I'm not going to use in the palette. In this case, this color came by "default", so I'm going to delete it. I'm going to eliminate the red, the white, and the rest of the colors are already in use. We have the invisible line, the internal lines of the objects, background color, other internal lines that belong to the main object, the color of the robot, dark color, and water. Now I'm going to miss some colors still to put...”
This transcript is automatically generated, so it may contain mistakes.
Course summary for: Traditional Animation: Composition, Rhythm and Camera
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Category
3D & Animation -
Software
Toon Boom Harmony -
Areas
2D Animation, Animation, Character Animation, Motion Graphics

Ezequiel Torres
A course by Ezequiel Torres
Ezequiel Torres has been working in the animation industry for over ten years. He started out doing editing work in Photoshop at a small studio, and, before long, he picked up some animation tricks in After Effects too. In 2011, he worked for Flamboyant Paradise, where he had the opportunity to learn from Tonio Quairiat and Javier Lourenço.
His career and experience culminated in him founding his own studio, Rudo, together with Pablo Roldán. For each commissioned piece, they strive to create animations that hook the viewer. In 2017, their video The Wolf went viral. The work that went into creating the dynamic shots for this video allowed Ezequiel to sharpen his vision of narrative shots, rhythm, and character emotion.
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