Yeah, that's the stuff! I've been a digital animator for almost a decade now, and I've started to flip my notebook pages sometimes. Not that I'm less of a cyborg now, but the feeling of analog flipping is really something, and it's so much fun to watch someone who can do this so masterful. A screenshot from here should be in a dictionary under "Muscle memory".
Oh this is exactly my job. I'm an assistant. Doing clean up and inbetween is my daily work. But next year we will use computer to do our work instead of using traditional method like this. I will miss those stuff :)
Well, this is one method, but I've noticed inbetweening without flipping the papers is pretty dead. Also doing it that way I would be concerned about the rotation of the limbs - you might actually shift the joint in the arm.
Ive actually done this before in animate, if i dont know where an i between will go ill copy the last keyframe and shift it so it aligns with the first. Then i sort of use it as a guide.
If the key drawing papers stay flush after you take them off the pegs & tape them, what’s the point of taking them off the pegs? Can’t you just keep them on the pegs but leave the inbetween paper off for the tilt & trace? Is it because the peg bar gets in the way?