Yo you commented this 9 yrs ago, i was the first dude that replied to you. Soon this will be remembered. The names Michael just incase i get famous from this and curious bout my name!
RIGHT? "Lots of pretty girls...erm...except for Doris...she's a bit big-boned and homely. We'll put her in the basement. She...uh...tests lightbulbs...or something."
With 25 fps, you gotta draw 1500 pictures for one minute of animation which you sit back and watch. Hail these artists. Talent, patience and passion 👏👏👏👏👏
i love the inking department segment. the narrators all like, "i know, i know. these girls are working instead of making you a sandwich. but rest assured they are all very attractive and the building is the most comfortable building imaginable."
This video portrays Men as the smart, innovative people who have to do all the hard work which is sketching and testing the animation, writing the script and recording the dialogues and music. On the other hand, Women are the "hundreds of pretty women", they are not smart nor do they get a hard task, all they do is color the sketch, at their own little building (giving them a little patriarchal cookie in order for them to shut up and do what they are told, appreciating what they get) which is easier for them because women are good with colors and clothes but nothing else right? This is sexism at it's finest mate.
PKToxic You really should chill out on the right wing propaganda on RU-vid. Everything you just said is some regurgitated bullshit you heard from Someone else peddling an agenda. Get the fuck over it... the old days were kinda sexist and racist. It’s time to move on. Stop trying to live in the past.
How animation has gotten so much easier over the years. No more painstaking hours of coloring cels in, now we can do that in just a few minutes, and the colors look much cleaner.
+ijfharvey it hasn't become easier per say. That diminishes the work itself. Creating animation is a very hard, long process. Thanks to technology we can do certain things more efficiently but it STILL takes four years to produce a full length animated feature. It IS NOT easy. Anybody who wants to become an animator or PAY for animation services should know that this is not an easy process! You still need 24 drawings/frames for one SECOND of animation! Now do maths!
Now this is what I call drawing and hard work!!! They really painted each scene one by one!!! Fantastic! While today, it has been much faster and easier with the use of computers, still...Disney does a good job with it.
Now animation is much easier, and has the potential to look much better. Just look at my little pony:friendship is magic. It is beautifully animated and would have taken much longer and looked much worse back when everything was done by hand.
ijfharvey The animation and art for My little pony is very bland and rushed, but dont get me wrong it is a show after all and of course less detail goes into making it. In my opinion animation like that is completely boring and simply cannot be compared to things such as Snow White, Lion King and any classic works that have taken a long time to make.
*Sniff* All the beauty of traditional hand drawn animation is being layed to waste in place of 3D animation, just because the companies can churn the films out faster in 3D and get lots of money. Tangled would have been just as good, if not better, in 2D. It makes me wish I was born in the "Golden Days" of animation :(
start drawing everything you see! AND DO NOT, DO NOT fall into the habit of "COPYING" other peoples work just DONT, (you can do it to teach yourself to appreciate others work) Master copying , but instead draw what you see in everyday life and start creating your own concepts. Just some quick advice and Good Luck!
Learn the fundementals of drawing, and learn how to ink, paint, ect. Come up with some storyboards, maybe have a few feiend to help you and all of that.
@@MikeOxlong2092 This just in; the sky is not blue. The ‘sky’ is an abstract sphere containing scattered gases and particles. Blah blah blah. And water is not wet...... water gives other ‘things’ the quality of wetness. I hope that in the 3 years since you left this thick as fuck comment you’ve grown up a bit and done some research #Burn # Whatadouche
504jec Actually, anime used to be made the same way, just look for "The Animation process of Sailor Moon" here on RU-vid and you'll see. Now, though, they use computers to assist in the process (digital coloring, for example).
How many Japanese cartoons have you seen, because there's a lot more variety in character design than you think. Besides, using your logic I could argue that every Disney character looks the same.
There is essentially nothing different between Asian and American animation in this time period. You don't have to like anime or it's design, but you shouldn't dismiss the amount of effort put into it just like the effort put into American cartoons. Really, anime is just a word to describe cartoons originating in Japan...
I find it really weird that I can't picture old times with various colors, whenever I watch old movies in black and white I can't imagine that the contemporary happenings happen with the same spectrum of colors I see in the present. When i was younger I found myself wondering if colors were invented around the time I was born which is stupid. I just wonder if some people thinks the same way I do.
This is INCREDIBLE! It's really sad to see how terrible animations are today in America... everything has been outsourced and computerized... there's no life to cartoons anymore because people want money but also want to cut corners... oh well, I'll always have the Disney classics (which are timeless masterpieces) to pass on to my children when they're growing up.
Agreed. Lilo & Stitch proved that a good animated product can be entirely made in-house with a downsized cost without having to outsource all the hard work to elsewhere.
Walt Disney was a genius. Quit being mad that he was so successful, meanwhile you make less than $40k a year and need government assistance to buy bread.
Lazy argument, Worm Dude. Just because racism was more common and prevalent back in the days doesn't make an individual flat out racist. In fact the first black animator (Floyd Norman) in Disney studios said there wasn't a hint of racism in Disney. He treated everyone equally in both good and bad. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-JdvLqwQAjdc.html
People still do now, like if you look at somones animations like for example, youtuber "gothfrog" , she uses photoshop to animate, now you try animating like, really hard. Really short animations can take 10 or 16 hours.
I thought it took longer to animate a CG scene than it was to hand draw characters, but then again, technology does advance. I'm working on getting to study traditional character animation in a few years hopefully.
Disney was so much better before they started the 3d animation it works for Pixar but now there will be no animation like this that I see growing up like lion king, Hercules etc
I agree that 2-D animation is very beautiful, artistic and memorable. But I don't think that CG is passionless... CG animation has its good and bad turn-points, as well as 2-D. I mean, I admire these two mainstreams. But still, I pay more respect to 2-D because you need more skills to do it, and it delivers the passion of the artist through the drawings, brush strokes, and the movements..
it is really incredible to make animation the traditionally way, but it takes a lot of time and patience. most people say they love it if people do it that way but really it takes many times ! I am sure they still do this but only work the result out of the computer (I'm not sure but think it). so working with the computer is also great :)
Makes me a bit sad to know that Disney closed all it's "traditional" animation studios some years ago... It's an era that has shaped what animation is today and what it will be for a very long time! Snow White, Little Mermaid, Pochahontas, Aladdin etc etc..pure magic!!
Their digital ink and paint process was called CAPS. It's what allowed Disney to make movies without having to hand color them. The Little Mermaid was their last film to use celluloid film to draw characters on. With CAPS Disney was able to make the animation look a lot more clean, such as lines that seemingly matched the colors on a charcter's clothing or skin for that matter.
there is something else Disney used to get that softy animations... they used real human animation, capture that animation with a camera and then traced every frame in a new sheet!.
Mikeh Miiikeh In practice, But I don't believe any rotoscoped shots made it into the film. I could be wrong. I will consult the illusion of life because I read something about it in there.
+Pjiggy oh, understand.... well i have seen the making off of alice in the wonderland and saw the real girl (same dressed as alice) that served as model to create alice... after seeing the smooth alice´s movement, i wondered how Disney did that... and someone said me that they were using rotoscoping, of course, not all film was made by that way.. but on some case were needed...
I love seeing this kind of stuff. Even though Im only 17, while I grew up I watched alot of these movies on VHS and fell in love with them. This is the true disney magic. The old classic cartoons and characters are what give the name disney its magic. Watching this just clearly explains why films like Snow White and Pinocchio Bambi and Alice in Wonderland were so great and magical. It's cause all these people we see in this video put their hearts and souls into producing these amazing features.
How were old cartoons produced in 1930? Old cartoons in 1930 were produced using a technique known as traditional animation or cel animation. Here’s a step-by-step process of how old cartoons were produced in 1930: 1. Script: First, a script was written for the animated short. This script is then broken down into scenes. 2. Storyboarding: The storyboard is made up of sketches that represent each scene. These sketches are used to plan the action and camera movements. 3. Voice Recording: Voice actors were hired to provide dialogue. During the process of sound recording, an animated short was played to help time the dialogue. 4. Animatics: The storyboard sketches were then put together on a timeline along with temporary dialogue. This allowed the director to see how the story was coming together before animation began. 5. Final Character Designs: Character designs were finalized before animation began. This included the design of the characters themselves, as well as any props they would use. 6. Layout: The layout artist takes the storyboard and creates a more polished version of each shot, adding more detail and finalizing the camera angles and composition. 7. Animation: Animators then drew each character and prop on a transparent sheet of celluloid, known as a “cel” or “sheet,” one frame at a time. Each cel had to match the movement of the character accurately. 8. Ink and Paint: After drawing each frame, the animation was placed on top of a static background, and the cel was traced onto another piece of paper to outline the character’s shape. The cel was then painted, and the paint would dry, and the animated cel would be laid over the painted background. 9. Compositing: Animators would layer the painted cels onto the background and photograph them one frame at a time, creating the final animation. 10. Sound Effects and Music: After the animation was completed, sound effects and music were added. 11. Final Edit: Lastly, the director would watch the final version of the animated short and make any necessary final edit changes before finalizing the cartoon. Thus, this was the long process of how the old cartoons were produced in 1930.
God, I really admire their hard works! I mean, they helped built a nice, memorable childhood for all the kids around the world! And now, I am learning animation! By the way, Walt Disney was good looking in person hehee..
more pretty girls... XD wow this is great! I love how this is so amazing, with teamwork and actual meaning... and I agree with basically all of these comments about nowadays cartoons.
Beautiful,but sad that the older techniques of animation have almost been tossed out for more computer generated work. I miss the classic styles of animation.
But think of the hard work that was put into making these films back then they didn't have the technology nowadays all you have to do is move A frickin you stick figure think of the Blood Sweat and Tears that was put into making the films they didn't have phones back then they didn't have the internet back then they had to use what they had
Amazing the talent and overall coordination required to create animation in those days. Those 50-70's cartoons are amazing, talented people made them, no computers., Roger Rabbit was not yet born. Animation employed a lot of people, a lot of artists, musicians , and everything else, editing , wow, that's some craft work
Nobody talk about the titanic work who those man done, the soul involved, and the many jobs that this industry created...everybody talk about "pretty girls" who back then, 100% sure for them was a good thing to make such kind remarks....for god sake's since when is an insult to call someone pretty..shity time we live
It's surprising how people used to make the cartoons and movies most people know and love, making them by hand one-by-one. so, one day when I become a full-grown adult, and try and try and try to become a hard-working person just like Walt would and become a person who represents Walt.
Disney Studios had a Sound Effects names of the People Jimmy MacDonald, C.O Sylfield, Robet O. Cook, Harold J. Steck, Herd Taylor and Robert Hathaway. Disney Had Music Editors Al Teeter, Evelyn Kennedy and Jack Wadsworth.
Wow! What a great bit of footage! We all know by now how animation is done, but this is a fascinating look into the time and "Snow White" in particular. It's also interesting to see Disney before he eased into his "Uncle Walt" television persona. Thanks for posting it!
2D will come round again. I know it's expensive, but so was 3D when it first appeared. TRON or the original Toy Story cost huuuuuge amounts, but 3D is a bit more affordable now. There have been some crap 3D movies, but the talent is still there. Tangled was superb. The Princess and the Frog was great, too. Software like Flash or ToonBoom will keep 2D going. All it takes is one person to say, "Let's do a feature-length version"... and have it do well at the box-office.
I felt proud about a two minute flash animation I made in Flash. I feel so incredibly small to the incredible work WD and his team put towards their work.
Poor walt Disney he most be rolling in his grave because of what these lunatics are doing they ruined his legacy of making a safe and entertaining shows for kids and families + the old art is waaaaay better now they look like every other production company nothing special about them
Wow...so that is how it done,its took a lot of time...Now I know what is the diferrence from Old Disney and Present.....Old disney have been put much much hardwork and love ,and today disney they are making it easy thats why we couldnt find the "magic" and "fantasy" on each movie,sad to know that they are not making classics...Damn it,I love HSM etc. But the foundation of disney should never Die..:)
Disney rules! To me, a picture book of Cinderella was the first stroy of Disney I met in my life. I love prince and princess of Disney. Disney was the first romance I experinced in my childhood. Owing to Disney, I'm still waiting on prince charming to come riding in on a white horse and take me away.
The Depression had little to no affect on Hollywood, and Hollywood, fully aware of the Depression, made highly entertaining movies (mostly musicals) to offer escapism to American audiences. By the time the US entered WWII in 1942, many actors enlisted and the rest sold War Bonds for the cause.
Ah, I nice video about the good old days of animation. All those (forgettable) computer animated movies coming out today are nothing compared to the Disney movies of old.