It’s not that I felt the intense detail was necessary, I just could not see how to convey the idea of a belt buckle without going into the details of the buckle (the dime is for scale). I spent a lot of time with a single hair brush trying to paint in detail. I had a huge collection of paints and some very small brushes. When I was younger I used to paint miniature lead figures. To me this is an amazing feat of communication. A small black blob in a tree, a curved V in the sky or actual detail as the observer might perceive it. An artist will look at a scene, assess how much of the bird is actually visible and draw just enough to give the impression of a bird. I break the feathers and eyes down to the individual elements and start thinking about how to represent these elements. If I want to represent a bird in a picture I immediately think of feathers, beak, eyes and wings. As a engineer I’ve always been impressed by an artist’s ability to convey a message using a minimum of information. Noticed on the Poser updates page that there was an update for Poser Debut.I think Smith Micro has a real hit with Poser Debut. I no longer use it, but decided to get the update anyway because the version I had was based on Poser 8 and would be completely useless without the update if I needed it later. However, the page the link sent me to said it was for Debut version 10. Nonetheless it took my old serial number and gave me a download manager to retrieve the update. This too asked for my serial and gave me the full install for Debut 10, which is based on Poser 10. Since they still support Debut, but apparently didn't want to fix the compatibility issues with Poser 8, they quietly kicked Debut up to Poser 10. That's somewhat of a bonus considering that the newest full version I have is Poser 9, and I'd got Debut for free long before then as part of a giveaway. So, anyone who uses Debut, or like me happens to have it but doesn't yet have Poser 10, can at least access all the newer figures and some of the features too.It began production as a result of Warner Bros. reinstating its animation studio in 1989 after a decade of dormancy. After the success of Who Framed Roger Rabbit, a new series was begun, making revivals of the classic Looney Tunes characters under the name Tiny Toon Adventures. It was the first of many original animated series from the new television animation division. The cartoon was also the first animated series produced by the collaboration of Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment and Warner Bros. Animation during the animation renaissance of the late 1980s and early 1990s. The pilot episode, " The Looney Beginning", aired 14 September 1990 as a prime-time special on CBS while the series itself was featured in first-run syndication for the first two seasons. The series ended production in 1992 in favor of Animaniacs, however, two specials were produced in 1994. In the fictional town of Acme Acres, where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live, the characters attend Acme Looniversity, a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Wile E. In the series, the university was founded to teach cartoon characters how to become animated comedy stars.Īs in Looney Tunes, the series is derived from slapstick and cartoon violence, like anvils falling on someone and liberal use of explosives. The series parodies and references the current events of the early 1990s and Hollywood culture. Occasionally, episodes delve into veiled ethical and morality stories of ecology, self-esteem, and crime. Most of the Tiny Toons characters were designed to resemble younger versions of Warner Bros.' most popular Looney Tunes animal characters by exhibiting similar traits and looks. The two main characters are both rabbits: Buster Bunny, a blue male rabbit, and Babs Bunny, a pink female rabbit. Other major characters in the cast are generally nonhuman as well. These include Plucky Duck, a green male duck Hamton J. Pig, a pink male pig Fifi La Fume, a purple-and-white female skunk Shirley the Loon, a white female loon Dizzy Devil, a purple Tasmanian devil Furrball, a blue cat Sweetie Bird, a pink canary Calamity Coyote, a bluish-gray coyote Little Beeper, a red-orange roadrunner and Gogo Dodo, a dodo. Two human characters, Elmyra Duff and Montana Max, are regarded as the main villains of the series and also are students of Acme Looniversity.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |