Most of all I like your idea to have online tutorials for TVP-beginners, and I think $ 5 or 10 isn't too much, so I hope you continue. I have always the feel(but maybe that is just me.), that teachers are doing this because it is so much easier to announce "golden rules" which have to be followed. I know it is always hard for a pro to see things with the eyes of beginners and so most of teachers are doing their lessons in "Disney-style and -rules", which imo keeps you away from real life and real study. The first thing for a newcomer could be how Inbetweening is technical working and usually the next question is: what would happens, if I would change the position of the dog at a definite frame, what does timing mean for expression ? And another question will come up from a beginner: what is "secondary action ?". ![]() ![]() To tell from the small clip it is not much information given, I just can see how a few different frames are coming out to be jump. Nevertheless, I think you're right - better to show the whole interface to get grip with palettes and timeline. Showing the actual process of drawing a character should be minimized in a tutorial that claims to demonstrate how to use the did you watch the whole $ 5 -product or the small extract/teaser from the website ? adding blank frames, deleting frames and instances, moving images etc. From there I would go to selecting a pencil and eraser and from there continued with demonstrating more attributes of the timeline, i.e. It would be much more useful if you began by demonstrating how and why the image & instance oriented timeline is ideal for creating key poses in preparation for inbetweening. I also believe you spend too much time drawing the dog in what appears to be straight ahead animation - a technique I consider questionable for the drawing style you have chosen, and shouldn't be used as part of a beginner's tutorial. Then you describe how you drew the eye too low on the face and proceed to use the cutout tool to erase it instead of picking the drawing up and pasting it where it looks better. A newcomer needs to be shown exactly which tools you are using and where you picked these up. First, it is problematic that you don't include the GUI in your demonstration. But hopefully the source of the bug can be found.Terrence, I looked at just the first tutorial and find many problems with it. Hello Agneta, this is a bug we are currently fixing. Re: Light-table (onion skin) is visible on playback. Dean Site Admin Posts: 937 Joined: Mon 10:07 am. Then at least we will know for sure that restarting TVPaint is the workaround to (temporarily) fix the issue. TVPaint version: TV Paint Animation 11 Pro WIBU(11.7.1-64 bits) Best regards, Agneta. Next time it happens I will immediately save my work then quit and restart TVPaint to see if the restart makes the bug go away. Yes, it's a nasty little gremlin that appears and disappears seemingly at random, so it is very difficult to figure out how to fix it. Léo also had this once earlier today, we'll have to check if we can reproduce it every time, otherwise this is going to be difficult to fix. I'm curious if anyone else notices this problem ? So I can not reproduce the bug, it just seems to randomly happen. ĮDIT: and now the bug mysteriously disappears again ! I quit TVPaint 11.7.2, then restarted it later and now the eraser behaves correctly. This problem is not present in release version of 11.7.1. This happens whether the Preferences are set to "The pen eraser is a freehand eraser" or set to "The pen eraser is the same brush, but set to 'erase' mode". The stylus is stuck in Erase mode and I have to manually switch it back to Drawing mode. ![]() When I draw with Pen Brush or Pencil, then erase with the Eraser end of the Wacom stylus it switches to erase mode, but then it does not switch back automatically to Drawing mode when I turn the stylus over to resume drawing. However, in 11.7.2 I am getting this old eraser bug again: Nethery wrote: ↑, 14:16Good to see version 11.7.2 released today.
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