![]() ![]() You will have to make a layout on your A4 paper that would be roughly 297 cm - 167 cm so that your paper has the same ratio as your screen. Also bear in mind that dpi is not the same as ppi and 1080p is 16:9 and A4 is not. Scale imported image to canvas size? Or do you get blurry lines then? Or cropping them in Gimp first before you import them. I’ll just check the scanner’s settings again for sure I only know A4 and A3 paper but that’s pretty much it.Īlso, are A4 papers good enough or do i have to switch to A3 papers ? (just pretend that i’m making a 1080p Blu-Ray DVD animation clip) (also for the sake of my eyes )įind a new paper bundle and do the sketch and ink processes on it, So the paper can keep the resolution steady (no resizing). I do have drawing tablet and i’m okay with inking on krita, but I prefer doing it separately,Īnd only use krita to colour the keyframes if i could, for the nice feel and a better view in sketch and inking. It already release the animation version (it’s still beta) which is pretty sweet.Įxcept that i’m not really into inking in Krita. Still haven’t quite found a program for that (irfanview could do the job though…)ĭrawing directly from krita. Resizing all images right after it scanned and before inking it (also still keeping its aspect ratio). Or if it is not, the only way to get through that problem is probably by: I don’t quite know how to change the settings in it but the one that messes it up might be the DPI settings in resolution (it was set in 300 DPI) I’m thinking that the problem is in the scanner itself. ![]() And when i try to scan it for the first time, the image resolution went too big, even for 1080p (3460x2433) I’m using A4 size paper to draw all the keyframes. I also a bit worried about the scanned images. Although the Switch layer method actually might do the trick better If you plan to do all your drawings, keyframes and limited inbetweens in Krita…įor the animating in synfig I’m thinking to either use the image layer and just change the directories in each necessary frame or just use the switch layer as you just suggested. How are you planning to do your inbetweens if your keyframes are png’s created in Krita? Oh, also is there any other way to do it other than those three methods that was mentioned above (switch layer, perhaps) ?īut alas, i’m happy that Synfig studio just saved my day Is there any way to import a number of images at once ?Īnd also making sure that all the images i imported always have the same resolution as the original images itself (not too thin or thick) ? That is just exactly what i need in this situation. The closest thing was blender VSE, but it was way too hard to navigate.Īnd then there’s a bit of a hope when i see this in the forum : image by image animation I was looking for a software that can actually do that task, and the results are a total NULL I just don’t want to go too far ahead.Īt least it was. Stack and set all the frames, keyframes and finally render. ![]() Export them on transparent background as.Like eyes in any gesture (close, open, half closed) as long as i need it. It also supports add layer from an image file, which is useful for onion skinning.Īlso in this step i might end up drawing some variable frames. ![]() Inking and coloring in Krita (lovin’ it!!).If not, i’ll just resize it when doing the step 3 I haven’t found whether i could resize it in scanning process yet (i drew all the keyframes in A4 paper, which is too big). Draw keyframes on paper, (yep, i got my table finally about a month and a half ago).And it uses even less number of frames sometimes, which is what most of the Japanese animation looks like.Īnd i finally got a workflow that i pretty much desired… Which means it reuses some animations and limiting the frame usage as well (as far as i know). So, apparently the “anime” thing that i always looking for to make was called “limited animation”. 2 months maybe…?Īnd well, finally i did a lot of searching and testing. It’s such a long time since the last time i ask for things in this forum (and got such a plenty of help). ![]()
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