So let’s list each in order: * Find a story idea, such as animal events or books. * Design each character and make scripts. * Write sketches and use live-action models. * Make the storyboard wall. * Use drawings as photographed rough animation tests. * Edit each drawings with ink and color, as well as backgrounds. * Photograph the pics 1 at each time and roll them in cameras. * Make sound effects and add music orchestra.
Also, study any and every movement as much as possible. Such as walks, personality, weather, etc. etc.etc. I'm an animation student, my teacher animated for Disney in the 90's and 00's.
@@toptopics245 you have to learn how to draw really good and then wants you make the characters you just make a tv show or a film if you want to do it like Walt Disney you have to draw the characters motion which will just be pointless but it makes you better you opinion one key word focus on one character at a time
Hello good people who are most probably not on earth today, thank you very much for making our childhood so colourful! Unfortunately, today we don't find you guys' legacy and the vibe in the current cartoon pictures. They are mostly dark, literally.
I can't thank Walt enough for advancing film making so much, there is very little competition even now. Also, I am massively impressed how fit Americans were in 1936, there is just zero obesity!
No processed shitty food. Their diets were not mostly fast food and garbage. They were also significantly more active. No one stayed inside all day to play games or watch TV or whatever else we decide to do that keeps us inside and sedentary.
3:12-3:47 Fun Fact: When animating Mickey Mouse in this documentary, the animator was using a grease pencil instead of a regular lead pencil, because the lead-based pencil sketches wouldn't photograph well.
The first Disney films and animations really took a lot of hardwork, time and effort to create. The people involved were the pioneers of cartoons which means unlike today where new arrivals often take inspiration from many previous shows, these men and women had to start from scratch and experiment what works without having much reference. They were the first ones to start an industry that would only grow and develop further.
I'm reading Neal Gabler's biography of Disney. Everyone in the industry, and other fans of cartoons, should read it. It's amazing how much they worked for the cartoons back in the day. When they made Bambi, the animators spent several months just learning how to draw deer. They even bought two live animals as models. And they chopped one carcass into pieces while learning about animal anatomy... Crazy.
This must have been the studio, where When You Wish Upon a Star was recorded in 1938 by Cliff Edwards and The Studio Chorus before The Disney Studio moved to Burbank.
It is nice to see artists sitting in front of paper and foils, working with brushes and paint instead of sitting in front of a computer and pressing a mouse.
@@filmsforallnations Then again, the animation process in those days was also very tedious work much like stop motion animation was which is why we moved on using computers in the first place to make things 'easier' I should say.
@@filmsforallnations it's so freaking expensive to do traditional animation nowadays, not like before They're aren't attached, they don't have a choice
Whatever you want to say about him Walt Disney changed entertainment forever. While he was a big moneymaker, he was also an extremely innovative and imaginative person. His movies and visions were almost always high quality. And I truly believe Walt Disney would be ashamed of what his company has become (especially with the stupid live action remakes). His company used to have so much life, quality, and authenticity (the 90’s and 2000’s were what I’d consider to be the peak quality of the company after his death) but it just isn’t there anymore. Now, it’s just driven so much by political correctness and way more about money
Walt Disney Feature Animation on 1400 Airway, Glendale, California, 1400 Flower Street, Glendale, California with 622/610 Circle 7, Glendale, California and Bay Lake, Florida. Then Walt Disney Feature Animation on 2100 West Riverside Drive, Burbank, California with Paris, France and Bay, Lake, Florida. of Disney Renaissance of Animated Feature Films The Little Mermaid (1989) The Rescuers Down Under (1990) Beauty and the Beast (1991) Aladdin (1992) The Lion King (1994) Pocahontas (1995) The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) Hercules (1997) Mulan (1998) and Tarzan (1999)
funny that the 4 women grwatly involved in the animation studio werev not mentioned at all in this video. Even the step where the drawing get inked by women.