My animation teacher used to tell me to animate the mouth shapes two frames before the actual sound. That is one drawing before if you're animating on 2's. I always found it to be quite useful and effective.
This was incredible! Such a simple dialogue....simple character....nothing but the character comes, shows he doesnt have shoes, and leaves. But animating in a such way all those simple things makes it so funny and entertaining! This is what i dont have and want to achieve...the liveliness which you present in anything in animation...im not able to put it into words right now.
You're animation is so inspiring! I spent years as a background and storyboard artist at FR and NAS, before getting burned out and moved to Vegas, now a show drummer. I just got a wacom and can't wait to order your tutorials. It's like when I was a kid and used to copy KISS records and Don Martin all over again.
How did the traditional animators do the lip syncing? I find it hard to imagine, since there is no fast way to doublecheck, if your frames match the sound. Did they note every word on an X-sheet first? Awesome video by the way :-) Best wishes from Germany Patrick
+Patrick Deza Maybe the voice actors would act to the sounds that they saw and try to sinc it up. But I notice a lot of older cartoons have just music which could explain this case :P.
Yes they would note each shape on a dopesheet and typically put the shape 2 frames before the sounds. This is for the west. In Japan, the would normally just animate it and then have the voice over done later, that's why the japanese have a lot less mouth shapes. One of the few exceptions is Akira which recorded dial first.
Wow, thanks for that tip, Aaron! I'm a 3D animator and I'm currently taking courses through animation mentor to strengthen my character animation. The next project I have to work on is a dialogue shot and this will really help!
I'm so happy to see you have an episode on lip sync! Your videos are always clear and really educational, and I've been struggling a lot with frame rate and tweening.
Thanks for the inspiration Aaron and keeping traditional animation alive and still kicking ass....We probably worked on the same projects back in the Disney days..cheers ..Rizaldy myfavedisneyRV
Aaron lovin your series you have some great info. I havnt animated anything but, I tend to agree with think the animations come before the sound, as light is before sound in life, just like lightning strikes, you see the lightning then you hear the sound of it. Keep up the great work and keep me being inspired. Thanx bud
Incredibly interesting and was something I was wondering about for a very long time. I just wasnt able to put into words. I often have transitions and now recently lyrics, and definitely noticed that placing them before the sound looked better but it still looked wrong because i didnt leave enough room for more frames. Thanks!
Sir, Your tutorials are very helpful..just great, being a flash animator I really find it hard to achieve the kind of flow you have maintained through out the animation even after applying tweens. So I would really like to have a breakdown of your animation process in the future.
This will help me out a lot with my new stop motion animation series "Operation Hollow Earth" since my characters will have lip sync animation. Thanks.
Awesome! I haven't hand drawn animation since art school. This makes me want to give it another shot! I would actually love a breakdown of the walk sequence in this animation. Mine always seem to mechanical instead of a nice flow. I always thought it was because of follow through but know it seems more about timing.........
Thank you so much for video. they re really amazing, I just bought your animation tutorial package from your website and it really helps, I hope you do more of these with some TVPaint tips.
Light travels faster than sound, so our brains process the visuals faster than the audio. That's why animating 2x early is so important - otherwise it looks late. Camp 2x before the audio 4 LYFE!
How to do lip sync on paper, without audio clips? What about syncing of vocals and consonants for traditional animation on paper?? I have never been able to understand how to do this... You worked for disney and you are an expert, can you explain how to do it??
Another awesome tutorial! I've watched every video on your channel and really love them. Question: what software do you use to record both yourself and the screen?
thanks for the awesome video Aaron! Even if it is pretty old. I decided a couple of days ago that I would like to start animating. I don't have an animation program so I would enjoy it you made a video on animating in video editors or if you already have one made than can you link me? P.S. how do you know if you have enough frames for the animation when animating in video editors?
Hey Aaron nice animation. Are you still using the Disney principles or is this a straight ahead approach? I've been using a more structured approach based on forces that for me seems to supercede a lot of things that were not culturally instinctual when the principles were agreed upon by 9 old men. Do you think the system is outdated?
I'm trying this out, but I can't animate right. It's because during movement, I can't see what I'm working off of. Is there a way to see the frames before so I know what I'm doing. I hope I made myself clear.
Thanks :) Ich have concerns about the color fastness of the screens. wacom specify 72% AdobeRGB for the 22HD and 92% for the 24HD. Unfortunetly, I had no way of testing the cintiqs yet.
My friends and I are working on an animation, we're a bunch of newbies so we wanted to know: Do you do the voice overs before getting started on key frames or is it backwards? And musical scoring comes after everything right?
Some animators do music before the actual animation. If it has a lot of key moments, it is easier to make animations way more dynamic, matching the music. With Voice Over, I often animate without any mouth movements and I try to predict how long certain lines would take. After that, it's easy to prolong some frames. Of course, I do it in Moho, which is vector based, so there's a bit more leeway on that. If the line is a bit more involved, I start from scratch or with slight variation, like arm acting.
The Cintiq has its advantages and disadvantages. Aside from the cost, you simply do not have the same amount of control on your lines as you do on paper. The thickness of the glass is part of the trouble. This becomes a problem when you are doing tightly spaced animation drawings. The spacing can be misinterpreted due to this.
***** huh. ok. i thought because in 3D, you animate with 24 frames normally, skipping too many shapes might cause it to be too snappy or you might end up with too many inbetweens. i'm still a student and we started lipsync classes this week, in 3D. Your video certainly makes me think. :) thanks for the reply, btw.
My animation teacher used to tell me to animate the mouth shapes two frames before the actual sound. That is one drawing before if you're animating on 2's. I always found it to be quite useful and effective.
Brilliant
That animation was smoother than butter oAo
This scene is actually really funny on its own.
This took u a day and a half? o-o UR A FAST ANIMATOR AND GREAT ONE
Well, he did work 20-something years at Disney, so it only makes sense.
Anyone can become as good as this old man the only thing u need it patience
I don't have any shoes. It's just my feet.
HMMM
*this comment causes stress*
This was incredible! Such a simple dialogue....simple character....nothing but the character comes, shows he doesnt have shoes, and leaves. But animating in a such way all those simple things makes it so funny and entertaining!
This is what i dont have and want to achieve...the liveliness which you present in anything in animation...im not able to put it into words right now.
You're animation is so inspiring! I spent years as a background and storyboard artist at FR and NAS, before getting burned out and moved to Vegas, now a show drummer. I just got a wacom and can't wait to order your tutorials. It's like when I was a kid and used to copy KISS records and Don Martin all over again.
Blue Collar Studio I thought you said NASA
Amazing! I´m glad there are great artist like you teaching and giving some tips, thank you SO much for this video, I subbed :D
You describe many points of lip-syncing I had never considered, thank you for taking the time to make this video!
How did the traditional animators do the lip syncing?
I find it hard to imagine, since there is no fast way to doublecheck, if your frames match the sound.
Did they note every word on an X-sheet first?
Awesome video by the way :-)
Best wishes from Germany
Patrick
+Patrick Deza Maybe the voice actors would act to the sounds that they saw and try to sinc it up. But I notice a lot of older cartoons have just music which could explain this case :P.
Yes they would note each shape on a dopesheet and typically put the shape 2 frames before the sounds. This is for the west. In Japan, the would normally just animate it and then have the voice over done later, that's why the japanese have a lot less mouth shapes. One of the few exceptions is Akira which recorded dial first.
koalabrownie I think some westerners did it the way they did it in Japan. (I saw a movie and the person was voice acting to the animation.
eon star
Yeah it's possible. I think it's usually cheaper to do it that way
Aaron, your channel is really growing! Please keep it up, I really love your videos, I always always learn something from them. :)
Oh my god, thank you, Aaron! I've been struggling with lip sync immensely, and your tips have helped me so much🙏
Wow, thanks for that tip, Aaron! I'm a 3D animator and I'm currently taking courses through animation mentor to strengthen my character animation. The next project I have to work on is a dialogue shot and this will really help!
Great Job Sir Aaron, You're a legend, Thanks for the tips. I hope I can work for walt disney too
Amazing Animation and you sir are the best teacher!!!
I'm so happy to see you have an episode on lip sync! Your videos are always clear and really educational, and I've been struggling a lot with frame rate and tweening.
Thanks for the inspiration Aaron and keeping traditional animation alive and still kicking ass....We probably worked on the same projects back in the Disney days..cheers ..Rizaldy
myfavedisneyRV
Thats so smooth 😍😍😍
Aaron lovin your series you have some great info. I havnt animated anything but, I tend to agree with think the animations come before the sound, as light is before sound in life, just like lightning strikes, you see the lightning then you hear the sound of it. Keep up the great work and keep me being inspired. Thanx bud
Not watched the full video ye but good to see you mamaged to grow the page like you wanted to🎉
Incredibly interesting and was something I was wondering about for a very long time. I just wasnt able to put into words. I often have transitions and now recently lyrics, and definitely noticed that placing them before the sound looked better but it still looked wrong because i didnt leave enough room for more frames. Thanks!
Thank you that great advice, I'm very near to animating the mouth movements and will be taking on board on your teachings cheers
This animation made me chuckle I'm a simple man! But great tips thanks.
You just saved me.
I have a deadline and I couldn't figure out the dialogue...
Thanks!
same
This video goes straight to the Essential Production file in my YT. Thank you for this tip! Glad I subscribe.
Oh my gosh I am so glad you made this video. I am terrible at lip sync.
Thank you so much for making these videos Aaron, your are a big inspiration.
I am working on my 3d animation showreel and your tutorials helping a lot. Thank you so much🌼.
Aaron's pearls of wisdom
I need to do some lip sync animation for my next project and this is just perfect.
Sir,
Your tutorials are very helpful..just great, being a flash animator I really find it hard to achieve the kind of flow you have maintained through out the animation even after applying tweens. So I would really like to have a breakdown of your animation process in the future.
Really enjoyed your video. I subscribed and look forward to your videos :)
Just Amazing......where've u been all my art life Aaron ....wow
You remind me a bit of my uppa…it’s very comforting
Extremely helpful advice.
That animation is beautiful man!
This will help me out a lot with my new stop motion animation series "Operation Hollow Earth" since my characters will have lip sync animation. Thanks.
thanks AARON u are my savior
Very simply put but very very helpful. Thanks!
Lovely Jubbly! ❤
Aaron, did you animate this dialogue as pose-to-pose or as straight ahead?
Wow thank you for this tips ! it's really helpfull!
Awesome! I haven't hand drawn animation since art school. This makes me want to give it another shot! I would actually love a breakdown of the walk sequence in this animation. Mine always seem to mechanical instead of a nice flow. I always thought it was because of follow through but know it seems more about timing.........
This is priceless. Thank you for sharing!
This is the best lip sync tutorial ever! I learned so much, Also, holy crap you're a good animator! :)
Amazing!
Great Tips ! Thanks .
Am I the only one who can't stop staring at that foot in the last part of the animation??
Powerful lesson.
PS: Hope he finally got the shoes.
Thank you so much for video. they re really amazing, I just bought your animation tutorial package from your website and it really helps, I hope you do more of these with some TVPaint tips.
awesome animation and lip syncing..
it's just perfect..
I love this video! It has helped me heaps! Thank so so much Aron
I hope some day make animation like this.
Great stuff….. I like it. Excellent!,!!!
Loved it 😁
Don't think I knew this trick before, good to know 8)
I am naturally good at lips sync. I didn't even know what I was doing.......... Now I know!!!!!! Other animator was like, his work is amazing!!!!
Light travels faster than sound, so our brains process the visuals faster than the audio. That's why animating 2x early is so important - otherwise it looks late. Camp 2x before the audio 4 LYFE!
This helps alot!
wooooo, es lo mejor que eh visto hace mucho tiempo
great tips Aaron! thank you! = )
When Aaron flips the animation, the thing sound like “scrabble apple”
this was really useful!
Thank you mr. Blaise Giving me a Bday Tutorial on animating a Dioglouge
Thanks for the tips! I'll be lip syncing today!
This is amazing!!!!!
funny because i dont have any feet, its just my shoes!
thank you so much !!
thank you a lot!
so good
Great tutorial video. liked and subd :)
thank you so much.
I cant get enough of that intro song...
How to do lip sync on paper, without audio clips? What about syncing of vocals and consonants for traditional animation on paper?? I have never been able to understand how to do this...
You worked for disney and you are an expert, can you explain how to do it??
Aaron, may I ask where you went to school? Curious :D
Would it be okay to delay the audio by just one frame when lip syncing a line?
you should do some comic drawing
cool
Another awesome tutorial! I've watched every video on your channel and really love them. Question: what software do you use to record both yourself and the screen?
It's called "Screenflow" - www.telestream.net/screenflow/overview.htm
Nick Burch Thanks for the quick response Nick!
thank you so much for sharing your experience i just wana know what software you used?
Much appreciated
thanks for the awesome video Aaron! Even if it is pretty old. I decided a couple of days ago that I would like to start animating. I don't have an animation program so I would enjoy it you made a video on animating in video editors or if you already have one made than can you link me? P.S. how do you know if you have enough frames for the animation when animating in video editors?
What brush do you use in TVPaint? It looks so nice.
Hey Aaron nice animation. Are you still using the Disney principles or is this a straight ahead approach? I've been using a more structured approach based on forces that for me seems to supercede a lot of things that were not culturally instinctual when the principles were agreed upon by 9 old men. Do you think the system is outdated?
i hear so many people say WACOM like Wah-com and then here i am, sayin "way-com" x'D great video though ! :) Very helpful
Hey you!
I say way-com too lmao
Chunji Huli yay ! :D
i say both at times lol
Vincent i say whack-um
Vincent same
I'm trying this out, but I can't animate right. It's because during movement, I can't see what I'm working off of. Is there a way to see the frames before so I know what I'm doing. I hope I made myself clear.
***** Yeah, I figured it out, by watching another video of Aaron's. But I didn't buy TV paint so it doesn't matter anyways.
***** I use sketchbook flipbook to animate now, but thank you for the help.
That's great... i'm steel exercising in using TvPaint... kind of difficult :S
Great Tut - thanks :)
Which cintiq dou you prefer? The 22HD or the 24HD? Any reasons why?
Thanks :)
Ich have concerns about the color fastness of the screens. wacom specify 72% AdobeRGB for the 22HD and 92% for the 24HD.
Unfortunetly, I had no way of testing the cintiqs yet.
Здравствуйте сделайте пожалуйста обучение в Adobe animate
My friends and I are working on an animation, we're a bunch of newbies so we wanted to know: Do you do the voice overs before getting started on key frames or is it backwards? And musical scoring comes after everything right?
Some animators do music before the actual animation. If it has a lot of key moments, it is easier to make animations way more dynamic, matching the music. With Voice Over, I often animate without any mouth movements and I try to predict how long certain lines would take. After that, it's easy to prolong some frames. Of course, I do it in Moho, which is vector based, so there's a bit more leeway on that. If the line is a bit more involved, I start from scratch or with slight variation, like arm acting.
program name?
El video empieza en el 2:45
Ücretsiz mi ? Program
I'm sure Cintiq is amazing but it's also expensive as hell. Especially for people who don't get paid in dollars. :((
The Cintiq has its advantages and disadvantages. Aside from the cost, you simply do not have the same amount of control on your lines as you do on paper. The thickness of the glass is part of the trouble. This becomes a problem when you are doing tightly spaced animation drawings. The spacing can be misinterpreted due to this.
@Aye Yuh Aye Yuh Because anyone that has a job can magically afford a Cintiq lmao
Please, give the poor thing some shoes.
>made this in just one day and a half of one
even if it means 36 hours of work, i feel soo useless right now...
I wonder how all these tips translate to 3D animation.
maybe you can't eat that many lip shapes.
***** huh. ok. i thought because in 3D, you animate with 24 frames normally, skipping too many shapes might cause it to be too snappy or you might end up with too many inbetweens.
i'm still a student and we started lipsync classes this week, in 3D. Your video certainly makes me think. :) thanks for the reply, btw.
张她还能!给她跟我说服役小弟
subscribed :D
poor pacman doeasnt have shoes
thanks so much for the insight! There isn't nearly enough of this kind of info out there for traditional animation.
Thanks so much!!