A collection of animated walk and run cycles. With a deep bow to Jamaal Bradley's 'Pencil Test Depot' as the inspiration for this blog.. However, this one is just going to focus on Walks.
Wow, thanks so much for posting these as Quicktime files! The Pencil Test Depot is diametrically opposed to posting quicktime files, which is ridiculous because you can't framestep through the videos!
On Nov. 29 , 2010 'Dead End' wrote: "Wow, thanks so much for posting these as Quicktime files! The Pencil Test Depot is diametrically opposed to posting quicktime files, which is ridiculous because you can't framestep through the videos!"
Sadly , Quicktime is now pretty much obsolete. Many of the Quicktime .mov files I had in the blog posts here won't even play in browsers anymore.
So I have had to convert all to YouTube .
However, if you use the , (comma) and . (period) keys you can step through a YouTube video frame by frame .
, (comma) is step back , . (period) is step forward.
The disadvantage is that often YouTube will automatically convert a video that was 24 FPS to 29.97 FPS , so it's adding an extra frame every now and then to make it run at 29.97 FPS. (Why , oh, why , did Apple abandon Quicktime and not give us something as good or better to replace it . )
Wow, I like this new site! :) And Cats Don't Dance is one of my favorite animated movies (in animation)!
ReplyDeleteGood luck, my brother!
Wow, thanks so much for posting these as Quicktime files! The Pencil Test Depot is diametrically opposed to posting quicktime files, which is ridiculous because you can't framestep through the videos!
ReplyDeleteI think you're doing a great thing here, please keep posting!
ReplyDeleteKudos to you, David!
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting these for study.
ReplyDeleteJames M
On Nov. 29 , 2010 'Dead End' wrote: "Wow, thanks so much for posting these as Quicktime files! The Pencil Test Depot is diametrically opposed to posting quicktime files, which is ridiculous because you can't framestep through the videos!"
ReplyDeleteSadly , Quicktime is now pretty much obsolete. Many of the Quicktime .mov files I had in the blog posts here won't even play in browsers anymore.
So I have had to convert all to YouTube .
However, if you use the , (comma) and . (period) keys you can step through a YouTube video frame by frame .
, (comma) is step back , . (period) is step forward.
The disadvantage is that often YouTube will automatically convert a video that was 24 FPS to 29.97 FPS , so it's adding an extra frame every now and then to make it run at 29.97 FPS. (Why , oh, why , did Apple abandon Quicktime and not give us something as good or better to replace it . )