and i thougt i was te only one looking for cartoony mouth lipsyncs for hours. I EVEN SEARCHED "RUBBERHOSE STYLE MOUTH LIPSYNCS" AND I DIDNT FIND ANY and i know this comment was 1 year ago
im using these, you explained them really well, thanks! not really using them for drawing animation, but for 3d animation, i couldnt find many tutorials on the shape of them, so this was super helpful
@@devonkong Also can I ask which of these mouth shapes you would use for a 'd' sound. Let's say for example your character was saying the word 'door'. Which of these mouth shapes would you start with?
what i find interesting is that, in 1:36, when you said the word "mouth", instead of using the mouth shape for "th", you instead replaced it with a mouth shape for "mouf", suggesting that you instead say "mouf" this may suggest that whatever your native language is, it lacks the "th" sound, often replacing it with "f". i am not here to roast your english, but rather give an insight about how your language background can influence how you animate lip syncs, down to each individual phonemes
Would I be able to draw my lip charts in Procreate then import them into Adobe Animate and turn them into symbols? Or do I have to draw directly into Animate?
@@devonkong the basics please, as when uploading a video designed in adobe animate into adobe after effects, i loose parts of it, others got distorted. Thanks Devon Kong :)