Showing posts with label rubber hose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rubber hose. Show all posts

Friday, July 22, 2011

Evolution Of Macaroni





Late 20s, early 30s: Characters are made of simple torso shapes. Limbs are tubes that have no pliability. They are even widths from one end to the other. When they bend, they bend mechanically in the middle, not towards one end or the other.



The macaronis can stretch but generally stay the same widths from end to end.

They gradually start to loosen up and get more organic.


Mid 30s - Getting more organic
The tubes are not the same with from one end to the other and they don't bend exactly in the middle
40sBy the early 40s the arms and legs are more flowing, not as mathematical as in the 30s.The bends in the curves have more variation.
The tubes are not perfect tubes anymore. The shapes fluctuate according to the needs of the poses. Knees and elbows become slightly angular.

Mid 40s bent elbows start to feel slightly anatomical under the flesh.

But poses still feel fluid.
Characters now have evolved cartilaginous soft skeletons.
Drawing with a mixture of rubber hose like tubes and more distinctly shaped bends and joints allows a greater variety of more specific poses - and thus richer acting.Arms and legs lose their elbows and knees when straightened. Limbs tend to be bell-bottomed rather than even widths at both ends.The 40s was the period where animators used the most drawing tools and variables to get very fluid and contrasty animation. They had more tools at their disposal and used them with greater control than any generation has since. That's what made it the Golden Age of Animation.

50sCharacters' structures stiffen, more emphasis is placed on the ossifying joints.
This is the arthritic period of rubber hose animation. Characters can still loosen up for broad actions, but in general are less pliable than 40s characters.
By the end of the 50s stiffness became the standard. After that, the combination of skill and appeal pretty much vanished.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Macaroni Theory





Thursday, June 03, 2010

Gottfredson Rubber Hose Fun

My theory is that during the first year of an animation program, the students should learn basic animation by using classic rubber-hose characters and moving them the way animators moved things in the 1930s. Then they should work their way into slightly more organic characters the next year or 2.

WHY LEARNING TO ANIMATE WITH RUBBER HOSE STYLE SPEEDS YOUR PROGRESS

It's a very appealing style on its own and Floyd Gottfredson did it well.







http://comicrazys.com/2010/06/01/mickey-and-his-horse-tanglefoot-1933-dailies-floyd-gottfredson/

Friday, May 15, 2009

How To End A Cartoon

Boy, no one made better endings than the Fleischers. You could never predict them!




Gotta have some good butt slapping.




Hordes Of Betties and Butt Slaps