Monday, August 31, 2009

Doodles cont.






I have some of you that are almost ready for the cartoon college. Just gotta finish some stuff this week and I will be more communicative.
If I've given you positive comments on your construction studies, try next:

Your own poses of classic characters that you have studied

composition/hierarchy studies - click the labels - you need this to do layouts

Daniel's Progress

Daniel's latest studies show hierarchy: Lines of action, construction, silhouettes, details and linework are all following the same plan and reinforcing each other.

I've been checking out everyone's links to their practice studies and am quite encouraged, indeed.

Not just by the quality of some of the drawings - but by how fast the artists who apply themselves to them advance.
Just a couple years ago I met with some resistance to learning anything that required skill, but times seem to be changing. More and more folks like Daniel are starting to apply thinking to their drawing toolkit - and it's showing.

This is his stuff from just a short while ago:Less confident, less understanding of hierarchy.
He's a lot more confident now, because he's understanding how lines are not just lines for their own sake, but instead borders that enclose forms, and in the process, his lines have become much smoother, more confident and appealing - and the forms underneath are more solid - while at the same time flowing and organic. That's a tricky balance of seemingly contradictory principles.

He snuck a pointy part into the heel of this character's foot, but I can forgive one transgression.
It's actually quite a thrill for me to see so many people taking to this stuff and getting good at it so fast. Maybe there's hope for some cartoons to be well executed again and fun in the near future. I'm starting to imagine a good layout crew emerging.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

more








Saturday, August 29, 2009

Doodle Day


I don't have any earth shattering theroies today, so here are some latest doodles.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Will Traditional Cartoon Principles Survive?


I was worried classic cartoon techniques - and the great studio cartoons of the 30s to the 50s themselves would soon die out and be forgotten. Certainly if all you could ever see were the modern cartoons on TV and even the feature films it would be a guarantee that our glorious past could never come back - and that would be profoundly depressing.

I'm encouraged lately by how many young cartoonists are doing my own exercises and getting really good at it, and that they are embracing actual practical skills and appreciating the beautifully drawn cartoons of the golden age of animation. It seems positively rebellious to me, considering the recent past of shoddy popular animation - and how many people who stood up for it.

PETE EMSLIE - A TEACHER WHO TEACHES CLASSIC PRINCIPLES

I've met a few Sheridan college students who praise teacher Pete Emslie because he not only explains classic cartoon drawing principles, but will actually sit down and show you by drawing over your drawings and demonstrating how to do them with an intelligent procedure.

As far as I know, this is very rare for animation schools. When I went to Sheridan, the teachers all praised Disney tradition but none of the teachers could show you how to do any of it. They didn't actually draw anything in front of you - or if they did the odd time you'd see why it was such a rare occurrence.


Pete's students have all told me how much easier it is to learn from someone who will demonstrate the techniques themselves. I imagine you'd respect the teachings more too, knowing that the guy preaching good drawing can actually do it himself.

HOW TO CONSTRUCT A DRAWING - LIVE


Pete and I have our own separate tastes (and some that overlap) for which classic cartoons we like best; he probably prefers Disney and Jones to Clampett and Natwick, but we both believe in the principles of good cartoon drawing that all these artists share.He's also well known for his stylish caricatures and generously shares his techniques on his blog:
http://cartooncave.blogspot.com/2008/09/working-out-likeness.html

Whether you like Disney, Clampett, Avery, UPA, Spumco, Tartakovsky, Pixar or almost any other character animation styles - they are all derived from the principles and techniques developed and used by the classic animation cartoonists of the 1930s and 40s. If you know these techniques, you will have a much easier time adapting from one style to another or creating your own style. Good drawing in general is not a style; it's knowledge, understanding and skill. The better you can draw and analyze, the more creative choices and control you have personally. You won't be a slave to lack of ability.

Here are some of Pete's online tutorials:

http://cartooncave.blogspot.com/search/label/tutorial


and his blog:
http://cartooncave.blogspot.com/

Obviously the best and quickest way to learn to draw is to have good teachers like Pete who can give you personal instruction, demonstrations and critiques but not everyone is lucky enough to have this. I sure wasn't. When I started in the business I would have killed to have teachers actually show me how the cartoons I loved worked. Instead, I had to collect what little information existed about cartoons at the time, and tape old cartoons off the air and copy the drawings and try to figure out what was holding them together - with the help of the Preston Blair book.

Today there are still a handful of dedicated traditional teachers like Pete, but even if you don't have personal instruction from a skilled pro, there is a ton of useful information at the cartoon blogs.


Michael Sporn's Blog


Michael Sporn has a great blog that is just filled with articles, art and information on the most commercially oriented (which to some critics means crass and kitschy) yet artistically principled animation studio of all time.


You can learn a lot about classic cartoons by looking at, studying and copying the model sheets and "how to draw" articles on this site.

Disney Magazine Cartoons


HOW TO DRAW TRADITIONAL CHARACTERS

HOW TO DRAW MICKEY


CLASSIC STORYBOARDING


BILL PEET'S LITTLE HOUSE

Here is Michael's article about the art of Disney animation and the book that inspired him and many others.


"I suspect that my receiving the book at such a young age made it all the more precious to me, and to this day it gives me positive feelings whenever I hit on certain pages and pictures in it. There’s a photo of Eyvind Earle holding up a cel of one of the three faeries that ALWAYS sends a chill up my back. It strikes to the heart of something I love about animation, and it inspires me like little else can. I can’t say what it is about this picture, but it speaks to me."



THE ART OF ANIMATION

Michael and I also share a love for animation by other classic cartoonists like Grim Natwick and Ub Iwerks and he has articles about them too:
http://www.michaelspornanimation.com/splog/?p=1708

So even you aren't lucky enough to have a skilled personal teacher who can sit down and show you how to draw traditional classic cartoon techniques, great blogs like Michael Sporn's are the next best thing.

ANIMATED FILM TECHNIQUES 1

ANIMATED FILM TECHNIQUES 2

Analyzing Contrasts-Pushing The Exaggeration

TJ is a very talented student and he has asked me to critique some of his studies.Here's one that perfectly illustrates a point I was making the other day.

This copy is well done, and I only have one critique:

It has been toned down. The original is more exaggerated. Where?

Especially in the eyes:
Let's analyze the expression in the original.

ANALYZE IN WORDS

The open eye is wide open and big or tall -taller even, than the left eyebrow. The closed eye is small and the eyebrow that goes with it is also small.


If you wanted to caricature this, then you would take the descriptive adjectives and add "er"

I would make the open eye TALLER. The closed eye SMALLER. MORE white space than pupil.

I haven't yet asked anyone to take a drawing and caricature it, but that's coming.


But I have cautioned about toning down drawings - or "maintaining the guts" when copying. When you draw a pose or expression less specific or exaggerated than the original, you are underturing.

This is something that seems to happen with a lot of us naturally and something we should resist. Analyzing the contrasts (in words) in a drawing helps you avoid underturing them.

Thanks TJ for the example and I will critique more of your drawings in the next week if you like. This particular one just happened to illustrate this:

http://johnkstuff.blogspot.com/2009/08/what-is-exaggeration.html

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Some Results From Cartoon College


Everyone is improving fast


Doing practical, logical exercises is the fastest way to get good at cartooning and I am proud to show these off after less than 2 weeks of the blog.