Traditional animation refers to the original way animations were created. Drawings and paintings were made on cel acetates which were then replicated and photographed. Afterwards, these photos would be sequenced together to give an illusion of movement to the drawings.
3D Animation is a computerized animation technique which uses specialized software packages, such as Maya and AfterEffects, to make 3D characters and objects for animated features.
Stop motion is where you take a series of photos and move stuff around in the photos and put them together in a editing set, and you got a stop motion vid. And a CGI animation is; well cgi stands for Computer Generated. So the animation was 100% done in a computer while a stop motion is done 25% in a computer
anybody got time for that
An animation is an animated drawing, cartoon, etc.A video is a live recorded motion picture.Animation : It is made of series pictures.
An OVA is an anime that was not originally aired on tv, and was on DVD (or VHS).
One is traditional and one is modern.
only heard about 2d and 3d, 2d is the traditional two-dimensional animation on paper scanned into a computer, Flash software, making paperless animation, it's a two-dimensional space
There is no difference.
yes there is difference between slide transition and slide animation. in slide transition there is only effect on slide but in slide animation there is only effect in text.
Stop motion is where you take a series of photos and move stuff around in the photos and put them together in a editing set, and you got a stop motion vid. And a CGI animation is; well cgi stands for Computer Generated. So the animation was 100% done in a computer while a stop motion is done 25% in a computer
Clip art is a drawing and an animation is a photograph.
difference between mbo and traditional management
what is the difference between a 'traditional' and a 'personal' CV
what is the difference between bop restarunt and traditional restaurant?
animation technique to me sounds like another way of saying "how you animate" and animation technology sounds like "what you use to animate"
difference between modern and traditional banking is
Animated is a verb, animation is a noun. Joe animated a story about lions and tigers. The lion and tiger animation was Joe's favorite.
In essence, there is truly little difference between "traditional" animation and computer animation; the primary difference is in the tools used to create these animations, the cost and effort involved in the processes, and the quality of the final output. Traditional animation is a very hands-on process; 2D animation is accomplished by hand-drawing hundreds upon thousands of individual frames only to transfer them to clear plastic cels, hand-paint them, and then film them in sequence over a painted background image. This requires a team of artists, cleanup artists, painters, directors, background artists, and film/camera crews, along with the storyboard artists and script writers to work out the original concepts; for large-scale projects, the amount of time, labor, and equipment involved can be staggering. Traditional 3D animation was less "3D" and more still-lifes of claymations done by use of stop-motion filming techniques; the true concept of 3D animation didn't really blossom until the use of computers in animation became more practical. Computer animation removes the need for many of the extra tools required to create an animation; all you need, in general, is a computer with enough system requirements to run the 2D or 3D software application of choice, and people capable of using that software. Depending on the type of animation desired, sometimes the process can be wholly computerized; in other cases, such as in many 2D "cartoon" animations, the hand-penciling work is still necessary, before it is then scanned to the computer to be colored and sequenced digitally. The process is much less labor-intensive, and generally much cheaper; there is also a greater margin of error, because your digital files can allow you to undo any mistakes up to a certain number of steps. thanks NM