Animation | Rough
It is much easier to adjust a scribbly arm that looks "floaty" than it is to redraw a fully rendered arm with perfect shading. By staying rough, you allow yourself the freedom to push poses to their extreme, exaggerating movements to create life.
If you find yourself erasing lines to make them crisp, stop. You are polishing a pose that might be deleted in ten minutes because the timing is wrong. Keep it messy. rough animation
Remember the golden rule: Embrace the scribble, trust the motion, and let the rough animation be the foundation of your story. It is much easier to adjust a scribbly
The Clean-Up arrives. It speaks in his producer's voice: "Smooth it. Fill the gaps. Kill the rough. Ship the product." You are polishing a pose that might be
: Secondary drawings are added to smooth out the transition between the keys and breakdowns. Why Rough Animation Matters
Think of a rough animation like a thumbnail sketch for a painting, or a scaffold for a building. It isn't meant to be pretty; it is meant to be functional. The goal is to capture the energy and physics of the character.