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We are a friendly filmmaking community devoted to the art of stop-motion animation using LEGO® and similar construction toys. Here, you can share your work, join our community of other brickfilmers, and participate in periodic animation contests!
A place to discuss, share, and create stop motion films.
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Good panning shots... one thing many brickfilmers do it build a special LEGO stand for their camera. Taping down a ruler (and making sure it doesn't move around) and then sliding the stand alongside it with equal distances between each frame would make for a nice dolly shot.
Good backgrounds is something different. That depends entirely on what kind of set you have.
To pan i usually create a LEGO cradle for my camera and clip it onto the baseplate my set is on, then i count across a few studs each frame. that way the camera is secure and it creates an even pan.
To pan i usually create a LEGO cradle for my camera and clip it onto the baseplate my set is on, then i count across a few studs each frame. that way the camera is secure and it creates an even pan.
And how would you make a cradle? I have a Logitech 9000, and I made a base that is modified from this one:
I did the same thing with my logitech 9000, just adapted it from somelses base.
Anything will do as long as you can move it across studs.
Last edited by Joe Sitch (December 29, 2009 (03:58pm))
I could help you with this one, seeing as I have a Logitech 9000 myself. Um...try and look up a way to build a stand out of LEGO's for it first of all. Second, if your animation program has an onion skinning feature, turn it on. every frame, move the camera a little bit over and test this for a while until you get good at it.
So use something else. Like HeliumFrog, or AnimatorDV+ Simple.
You don't necessarily need onion skinning to animate stuff, though it can be a good tool for some. When shooting panning shots, I myself usually play back the 3 or 4 most recent frames together with the live feed and see if it's jittery or bumpy. It's pretty time consuming but it works for me.
That tutorial isn't of a pan that is teaching you how to TRACK a PAN is completly different... just thaught i'd let you know:)
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