Raiden no Kishi (post: 1218170) wrote:Also, I hope never to hear "Nate" and "prance" in the same sentence again . . .
[SIZE="7"][color="MediumTurquoise"]Cobalt Figure 8[/color][/SIZE]UC Pseudonym wrote:For a while I wasn't sure how to answer this, and then I thought "What would Batman do?" Excuse me while I find a warehouse with a skylight...
sondog wrote:The Nazis don't own the alphabet...
Tsukuyomi (post: 1217894) wrote:Hahaha, I so thought it was going to be about our Steve here XDD
Nice work ^^ It kinda reminded me of Real Life Consequences The Giant Alien Potato can be Head Crab and SS can be John Freeman XDD
RidleyofZebes (post: 1218229) wrote:I do believe you mean Gordon Freeman... Right, Tsuku-chan?
Warrior4Christ (post: 1217848) wrote:Hehe, that was cool! You certainly have a talent for stop motion/computer animation.
Just curious: where did you get the music from?
It was a lot of fun, but if I do anymore stopmotion, I probably won't use Lego's. They are very difficult to animate!:dizzy:
Weird...I've always heard that Lego were easier to animate.
I still prefer to animate with Lego, though I've tried other things like Minimates.
sondog (post: 1247175) wrote:Thanks, glad you liked my little flick!
The strength of Lego is that you can quickly create all kinds of fun worlds and backgrounds. And it also has a lot of pre-fab little people to work with. But the work of animating the little people is very difficult compared to working with larger, more flexible models. That's why professional stop motion models are all much larger than Lego people.
But of course the problem is that if you don't work with Lego products, you have to make your own models or pay a premium for them. But if you want to do anything professional with stop motion (ie - actually sell your videos or create product for others to sell), then you can't legally use products owned by others (like Lego products).
How recently did you do this? Pretty neat!
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