Collop Monday

“Collop Monday: pancake Tuesday: fruttis Wednesday, an hey for Thursday afternooin.”

‘Provincial Words in use at Wakefield’, collected by William Stott Banks, 1865.

‘COLLOP MONDAY, day before Shrove Tuesday.’, wrote W. S. Banks in 1865, ‘Children had a custom, and in some places have yet, of giving their School teacher bacon collops and eggs on this day. People thought no luck would attend them all the year if they did not dine on bacon collops this day.’

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Categorized as Drawing

Hand Drawn

There are thirty-four individual drawings of hands and almost as many of the figure in this short animation, which lasts about four seconds.

animation frames

It started off as a doodle of a man turning his head but moved further away from the cartoon original as I tried to get some expression into his face.

hand drawn cartoon

I drew it on my iPad Pro using an Apple Pencil in Clip Studio Paint EX. I’d been reading a tutorial about using Vector brushes so I’ve kept things simple and this has been drawn with the G-pen vector brush and the colour added on a separate layer using the Paint Bucket tool set to ‘Refer other layers’. As you can see here, the layers are treated as individual timelines in this program.

It’s usual to keep the timeline open for reference below the drawing but I might try my next animation with it above the drawing, because occasionally my hand would rest on a frame of the timeline and I’d find myself drawing on another cel.

I’ve got ‘Onion skinning’ turned on here. The blue outline represents the previous frame, the green the next frame.

Drawing all those individual frames of hands and faces has helped me get a feeling for the way the program works. It’s a time-consuming process but the traditional method of drawing every frame in an animation is closer to my sketchbook drawings than the previous methods that I’ve tried – such as Adobe Character Animator – which are often best approached as you would a cut-out animation.

Link

Clip Studio Paint EX

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Baker’s Dozen

After completing the animations based on my Walks in the Rhubarb Triangle, I’ve now turned to my 2011 paperback Wakefield Words based on Wakefield solicitor William Stott Banks’ 1865 collection of ‘Provincial Words in use at Wakefield. When I was working on the book, I enjoyed drawing the variety of subjects that he’d included. The pen and ink format is ideal for exploring various animation techniques that I want to try.

I’m surprised in this one that Banks records ‘toathre’ as meaning ‘two or three: a few’ as I would have thought it would have had the same meaning as ‘t’other’, meaning simply an alternative: ‘one or the other’.

Strider

With apologies for putting this snippet on a continuous loop, but it would be too short otherwise . . .

Please press pause before it drives you mad!

I’ve come back to an old favourite drawing program, Clip Studio Paint, which, in the EX, version can be used for animation on an iPad. It’s not as simple to use as the FlipaClip program that I experimented with the other day, but it offers far more possibilities when it comes to drawing, not that you’d realise that from this loop animation, which I’ve drawn simply to go through the stages of the process.

The thing that had me mystified was the relationship between frames, layers, folders and animation folders. If you can grasp that you can just get on with the drawing and track your progress in the animation instantly with the click of a button. It isn’t as difficult as it sounds, it’s just that it’s SO OBVIOUS that most YouTube tutorials don’t explain it clearly enough. FighnimatesHow to Animate in Clip Studio! (see link below) was the tutorial that finally enabled me to grasp the principle of using animation folders in the timeline.

animation layers
Animation Folder layers in Clip Studio Paint

The point about grasping the way layers work in the timeline is that I can have my background in one layer and my walking man in a separate layer above that. Getting the man to move for two seconds involved 24 separate drawings. Once I’d got the hang of all that, I realised that I could draw the man’s shadow on a separate layer below the man but above the background. Doing it that way, I didn’t have to worry about accidentally drawing over the silhouette of the man as I drew in the shadows. Of course the shadows also needed to be 24 separate drawings.

I believe that there is now an option to add a soundtrack in Clip Studio Paint, but in this case I stuck to the method that I’m familiar with and added it later when I’d exported the MP4 movie to Adobe Premiere Pro on my desktop iMac. The pair of trainers used to supply the sound effects for the bouncing ball and for the footsteps of camels crossing the Gobi Desert, once again came in for the man’s footsteps.

And I’m sure that my friend Karen Chalmers, who composed and performed the soundtrack for my Brief History of Rhubarb animation, would like me to make it clear that I’m the one who is responsible for the short solo performance on ocarina.

Link

How to Animate in Clip Studio Paint! twenty minute video tutorial by Fighnimates

Walk Pencil Test

I’ve been reading about getting cartoon figures walking in Richard Williams’ The Animator’s Survival Kit but the only way that I’m really going to understand it is to try it out. The only figures that moved in my Brief History of Rhubarb animation were the camels trekking across the Gobi Desert. I was pleased with those, the way the bags of rhubarb swung gently as the camels walked along, but they were the Adobe Animate version of cut-out animations; Williams focuses on traditional hand-drawn animation.

I’m trying a simple free program FlipaClip, which enables me to draw and instantly play back my frames. The free version watermarks the movie, but it’s an attractive logo, so I can live with that, and I think that it’s a great program if you’re trying to get started in hand-drawn animation.

To practice getting characters to walk, I couldn’t have a better subject than the ‘Ploo Stotts’, the Plough Monday revellers from my previous post. W S Banks, who recorded the old custom in 1865, tells us that a stot is ‘a staggering, clumsy person’, so however silly the walk for the nine figures in my animation, it will be appropriate to the subject.

Link

FlipaClip at the Apple App Store

Ploo Stots

PLOO STOTS (stot: a staggering, clumsy person), plough stots, farm servants, having patched dresses and ribbon ends on hats and clothes, a blowing cows’ horns, going round begging on Plough Monday (the first after Twelfth Night), with a plough-frame steered by the last married man, the two youngest lads being drivers, two of the eldest being the beggars, and the rest taking place of horses. The practice is almost gone out now, though one party, without plough, came into Wakefield in 1865, but on the wrong Monday – namely, a week too soon.

William Stott Banks, 1865, quoted in Richard Bell’s illustrated ‘Wakefield Words’, 2011

Like a Rubber Ball

Continuing with Richard Williams’ Animator’s Survival Guide, here’s my second attempt at the bouncing ball. Williams doesn’t suggest the set of steps, that’s just something that I couldn’t resist trying.

I did think of doing this again using stop action and a coin but I’m keen to introduce an element of drawing. This is still deliberately basic: it would be easy to have the ball squish slightly as it hits the step but Williams advises that it’s easy to overdo that kind of thing.

I used Adobe Animate to add movement to a single Fresco drawing, saved as a PSD Photoshop document, with the ball on a separate layer.

bounce sound track

For the sound of the ball bouncing I used a pair of trainers, banged together. I couldn’t keep up with the speed of the bouncing ball, but it was so satisfying to cut and paste the soundtrack to match the precise moment that the ball makes contact with the step.

Barbara’s Rhubarb Cheesecake

“Welcome to the Rhubarb Kitchen!
“Today we’re making my all time favourite rhubarb recipe, a rhubarb version of the classic baked cheesecake.
“It might be very calorific but our local-grown forced rhubarb really is something to celebrate.”
My cartoon animation from Wakefield’s Rhubarb Festival features Barbara’s recipe and Karen Chalmer’s music.

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Bouncing Coin

After finishing my Rhubarb Festival animations, I realised that it was time for me a bit more about animation. I’m enjoying reading The Animator’s Survival Kit by Richard Williams but thought that I’d understand it better if I tried some of the animations that he suggests for myself. This bouncing ball animation took just minutes to film but it took a while for me to find the most effective way to convert the sequence of images into an animation. After trying the timeline in Photoshop and in Adobe Animate, I eventually settled for importing as an image sequence into Premiere Pro.

iPad

My studio setup was a precariously balanced iPad and my subject was a 1797 twopenny piece on the studio floor. Appropriately Richard Williams’ hefty Survival Kit provides the necessary gravitas.

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A Brief History of Rhubarb

Commissioned for Wakefield’s Rhubarb Festival, my cartoon animation tells the story of rhubarb from its origins in the cold winters and rich moist soils of Southern Siberia, through to the heyday of Yorkshire’s Rhubarb Triangle when a regular night train from Ardsley Station carried 200 tons of forced rhubarb to London.

Rhubarb Festival
Nicholas Culpeper, currently starring in ‘A Brief History of Rhubarb’ at the Old Market Hall, at the Rhubarb Festival.

Along the way we meet Marco Polo, Ghengis Khan’s camels, Nicholas Culpeper and Rhuben Cushstead, head gardener.

Music by Karen Chalmers.