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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rotoshop is a proprietary graphics editing program created by Bob Sabiston.[1]

Rotoshop uses an animation technique called interpolated rotoscoping, which has been used in Richard Linklater's films Waking Life and A Scanner Darkly, as well as the Talk to Chuck advertising campaign for Charles Schwab.[2] The name is a play on Photoshop, a photo editing program from Adobe. The software is not currently available for use outside Flat Black Films, the developer of Rotoshop.[3]

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Transcription

Aims

The software was developed to allow the user to create animation using techniques reminiscent of hand-drawn animation, yet preserving nuanced expressions and gestures that would not generally appear using traditional animation methods.

Use

Interpolation

Like Fantavision and Adobe Flash, Rotoshop allows for interpolation between keyframes. Once the artist has drawn key frames at the start and end of a time period, the program automatically generates intermediate frames. It is a simple form of "automatic tweening." Interpolated lines and shapes have a very smooth, fluid motion that is extremely difficult to achieve by hand-drawing each line.

Freezing

In order to manage different objects in the scene, the user can break the drawing into layers. A layer can be "frozen" so that a single drawing remains visible throughout the entire scene. This feature is necessary for backgrounds and other things that do not change shape through time. This frees the user from having to draw the same image for every frame in the sequence.

References

  1. ^ Los Angeles Times
  2. ^ Stevenson, Seth (2005-12-05). "Money Toons: The distinctive animated ads from Charles Schwab". Slate. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  3. ^ Flat Black Films

External links


This page was last edited on 14 April 2024, at 05:34
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