Title: Controlling speed and smoothness in animation Post by: HeadyImages on March 13, 2015, 10:23:15 PM Hey everyone,
I'm new to the forum and apologize in advance if this is in the wrong category or has been asked 100xs before. I've been playing around with this MB3D software for a few weeks and finally spent a few hours today trying to get the feel for creating animation. My question is if anyone can give me any tips on how to control the speed of the camera while maintaining a smoothness? Does rendering more subframes between keyframes make it slower? The first video i created had the speed i desired but was very choppy. The second video I made was smoother but extremely slow camera movement. I suspect I may have over compensated on the latter. The first video I spaced out the keyframes a great deal and saved at random points, the second video I spaced out the keyframes to about 5-7 clicks and had the subframes set to 120. Thank you in advance! Title: Re: Controlling speed and smoothness in animation Post by: cKleinhuis on March 13, 2015, 10:43:09 PM yes, the subframes control the smoothness, the more frames the smoother it becomes, you need to take care for yourself to adjust it accordingly to the distance travelled, for fractals you have to additional take the zooming factor into account, since you can zoom very much this has to be smooth as well and you can not map directly the x/y/z distance travelled to time you have to include the zoom factor as well, if you want to make an overal smooth long animation with many keyframes this is something you need to take care for
you might need to dig a bit into movement perception of humans, since you might know 25 frames is the lowest frame rate per second that achieves a "smooth" movement, but generally for digital art a higher framerate is desirable, so 50 frames are more or less super smooth and 100 frames per second (if hardware allows it ) is i think at the limit you can visually distinguish so, rule of thumb is, 25 frames make a second, this is something you have to enter in your video encoding software, you can play any sequence of frames at any framerate you like, but the more frames you have the smoother it is ... as example, 25 frames played over 1 minute is just a slide show ;) 10 frames played in 1 second is a jaggy but perceivable motion, 25 frames played for the duration exactly one second is the default cine/movie setting you see in television ah yes, and hello and welcome! ;) Title: Re: Controlling speed and smoothness in animation Post by: HeadyImages on March 14, 2015, 12:57:43 PM Thank you for the info and the welcome :dink: |