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This is a short clip I'm reposting from Trigger Workshop Non animators will probably only see this as a simple line but it's about understanding the initial force in a movement and how it affects the rest of the body. Its called the Wave principle Yoh Yoshinari heavily uses it

252,180 Aufrufe • vor 2 Jahren •via X (Twitter)

10 Kommentare

Profilbild von SheerKuga
SheerKugavor 2 Jahren

The person giving the explanation is Yoh Yoshinari. He's god animator

Profilbild von Etienne Law
Etienne Lawvor 2 Jahren

I wish more documentaries came out. Though I do appreciate the NHK eng narrator dub one's they've had coming the past year of so. I still think the LWA one might be my favourite, but it's probably the most readily available one too. Other older ones can be harder to find.

Profilbild von TheFlyingPanda
TheFlyingPandavor 2 Jahren

How familiar

Profilbild von Darren Lauture
Darren Lauturevor 2 Jahren

gotta love fundamentals

Profilbild von Markypin
Markypinvor 2 Jahren

id give my left nut to learn from him

Profilbild von 🌟 Chloe/クロエ 🌟
🌟 Chloe/クロエ 🌟vor 2 Jahren

I’m more surprised the program they’re using is procreate!! Omg!! And some people tell me procreate sucks for animation aaa! This gives me hope

Profilbild von seventeencrows
seventeencrowsvor 2 Jahren

is there a full video of this?

Profilbild von SheerKuga
SheerKugavor 2 Jahren

this is the twitter post, I can't find a full video

Profilbild von 𝒫𝑟𝑒𝑔𝑢𝑖ç𝑜𝑠𝑜
𝒫𝑟𝑒𝑔𝑢𝑖ç𝑜𝑠𝑜vor 2 Jahren

Is it normal for me to just feel how something should move and then make it? I don't know almost any principles but when something feels like it's moving in a wrong way i just erase it and do it all again, i do try to have some reasoning before animating tho.

Profilbild von diaverik | commissions open~
diaverik | commissions open~vor 2 Jahren

the 'static' equivalent is called Line of action-

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In this incredible demonstration from the Maritime Technical and Safety Institute in Japan, a large wave tank uses many synchronized wave-generating devices to create visible symbols and patterns on the surface of the water. Each paddle produces a small wave, but when many waves are emitted at specific timings, amplitudes, and phases, they begin to overlap. Where the wave crests reinforce one another, the water rises. Where a crest meets a trough, the motion cancels out. This is called interference, and it is one of the most fundamental principles of wave physics. By controlling the phase relationship between many individual wave sources, researchers can shape the surface of the water into temporary patterns, symbols, and directional flows. In other words, the visible image is not “drawn” onto the water. It emerges from the mathematics of waves interacting with one another. This is the same underlying principle behind acoustics, cymatics, ocean modeling, signal processing, holography, and even the way complex field patterns arise throughout nature. A single wave carries motion, but many waves, when organized in relationship, create structure. This is why water is such a powerful medium for understanding resonance. It makes invisible dynamics visible and shows us that form can emerge from rhythm, timing, frequency, and relational coherence. At a deeper level, this demonstration reveals something profound about reality itself… Patterns appear when many small movements become synchronized enough to behave as one field. The ocean, sound, light, and even the nervous system all do this, because life is vibrational in nature… Did this expand your perception?

🧬Maxpein🧬

31,385 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten