Pixar's Drawing Tool 145
May Kasahara writes "Millimeter has an interesting look at Pixar's Review Sketch tool, one of this company's latest pieces of proprietary software. It's cool in that it allows directors to draw on top of CG images with a Wacom Cintiq, essentially bringing elements of traditional hand-drawn animation into the 3D realm. The article discusses how the tool came about, how it was used during the production of The Incredibles, and even includes a discussion of the tool's naming."
Wow... (Score:1)
Close... (Score:1)
In less incredible news, Pixar has pushed back their last feature, while paired with a certain evil empire, Cars until May 2006
(insert riot here) which had been due Nov 2005. This is so they can sell more DVDs for your holiday shopping pleasure later in 2006 (the fucked up logic escapes me, but Dreamworks is doing the same shit with Shrek 3, moving it back to May 2007)
Isn't all that new... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:2)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:2)
2) Server? Who needs a stinkin server? But again, probably could through arexx.
3) That's hardware related, but I do have a tablet for the Amiga that has 2 buttons on it, one switches to Erase mode.
4) How you gonna do that accidentally? Are you that inept?
And overall: Get some film and a rotoscope and some paper, you can do the same.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:5, Insightful)
When you're working on a major motion picture that has several dozen artists, a full team of probably close to a hundred people, and a budget of millions, you need accountability if someone makes a change.
I would think an artist would welcome being able to look back at certain versions of scenes, call them up at any point, and derive how the drawing got to where it is currently. This isn't some starving artist creating basic 3D renders in his garage; this a multi-million dollar business.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:3, Insightful)
1) The director is always right.
2) If the director is wrong, see #1
There is no reason to go back to see what the director was right about in the past, because all that mat
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
Do you randomly spaz on people for no reason at all?? This isn't a film school test and you aint no teacher. And as if being able to look back and see who made what changes when wouldn't be useful.
There is no reason to go back to see what the director was right about in the past, because all that matters is what he is right about in the present.
What if A is right now and B is wrong, but in the past B was right and A was wrong?
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
No...check the user number.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:2)
All tradmarks or registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:2)
People who haven't used Amigas don't realize how powerful ARexx was. ARexx made it trivial to extend the functionality of programs. Nearly every program had an ARexx port that you could connect to. Those programs exposed most, if not all, of their functionality via ARexx functions that you could access. With a couple lines of
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
I think a "History of Programming and Systems" should be a requirement for CS classes.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
A good number of Amiga drawing programs had a lock background layer function. I don't remember well, but I'd think theres a good chance TVPaint had it.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:3, Interesting)
Did it have thoughtful design features, like turning the pen over to erase (obvious) and not allowing someone to delete the whole screen accidentally (not as obvious)?
We (now obsolete) draftsmen used to actually have electric erasers [artsuppliesonline.com] and I doubt that real illustrators ever bothered to use the other end of a pencil for erasing. The choice of grades for graphite and eraser compounds (not to mention personal style) were too great to just rely on one type of erasure. I could blather on about this, but it wo
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
WACOM is discontinuing the Cintiq line. So, lot of good this is...
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:2)
That's a pity. Oh well. I nearly bought one of those. Unfortunately, the resolution was too low (I really like my 1600 by 1200) and the price was too high. I bought a TabletPC instead, no regrets there, and it was cheaper and higher res than the Cintiq.
I guess what I'm saying is I'm not all that surprised.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:2)
I communicated poorly. I have a 1400 by 1050 (still better than 1280...) Toshiba M-200. It cost me $1,800. The price of the 15" version recently dropped from $1800 to $1,500, making it a bit cheaper, but it only does 1024 by 768.
The bare minimum I would have needed was the 1280 version, but I'm much happier with the M-200. Plus it's a great little laptop.
Re:Isn't all that new... (Score:1)
Could this have other applications? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:2)
Heraldo could report from the huddle...
Pool (Score:1)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:2)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:2)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
Maybe they can add the ability to play sounds like "Boom" or "Bam" or "Favre".
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
"Let's say an apprentice doctor is performing a virtual surgery and suddenly needs help from a teacher surgeon
I wouldn't like to be the patient in your example...
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
Re:Could this have other applications? (Score:1)
They re-invented the telestrator? (Score:1)
Re:They re-invented the telestrator? (Score:2)
Mac tablet imminent! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mac tablet imminent! (Score:1)
Re:Mac tablet imminent! (Score:2)
Nope, I believe a statement like that would be coming from the "holy-crap-sex-on-a-stick" department.
Re:Lego Animation (Score:3, Informative)
Alias Sketchbook Pro is very similar (Score:2, Interesting)
Alias Sketchbook pro is an EXCELLENT tool. I would like to see it have the Pixar workflow added to it though, which is to simply allow you to draw
Re:Alias Sketchbook Pro is very similar (Score:2)
Re:Alias Sketchbook Pro is very similar (Score:1)
Re:Alias Sketchbook Pro is very similar (Score:1)
*eyes cintiq enviously* (Score:2)
My brand-new Intuos3 seems as dust and wormwood to me now that I hear the Cintiq really does work... I am consumed with envy and covetousness... the great shininess of this shiniest of toys calls to me... perhaps finally it's actually time to hop over to the US and shop for one!
PS
I live in the UK. Sensible people don't buy at UK prices.
PPS
For innovation, service and attitude, Wacom are the best tech company in my universe.
So? (Score:3, Funny)
The director could draw on an image, and then play it back with the image moving underneath his drawing
Pfft. John Madden has been doing this for years!
Re:So? (Score:1)
"Desktastic" from Panic.... (Score:5, Informative)
It's really quite a bit of fun! Not to mention available to Joe User.
Am I missing something? (Score:2, Insightful)
Couldn't they just have gotten this guy a nice tablet PC, a copy of Photoshop, and then give him a new layer to go hog wild on? I mean, is this really that revolutionary?
Or they could have projected onto a whiteboard with one of those fancy tools that transfers whatever you write to a PC...thus having his sketch overlayed on the original...there seem to be dozens of better alternatives to their orignal idea of taking a digital picture of the whiteboard.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:2)
> of Photoshop, and then give him a new layer to go hog wild
> on? I mean, is this really that revolutionary?
Bill Gates? Is that you?
Seriously. The idea is that they can can sketch over a series of CG frames in the movie:
> The director could draw on an image, and then play it back
> with the image moving underneath his drawing.
So when they're playing back the film, they can see the new ghosted sketches on top of it:
> When
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:2)
Not to mention that vector drawing in Photoshop is still awkward. Even in the latest version, the vector tools still don't blend very well with the rest of the app. If you draw a squiggle with the Freeform Pen tool, for example, you get a Shape layer that uses the squiggle as a mask over a solid color. If you want to get a natural media-looking line, you have to draw
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why its not the same (Score:5, Interesting)
Its not a pixel drawing tool. Its a hybrid vecto tool with erase any part of the stroke you put down capability. You erase any part you like, which is a neat solution.
quoth..
A key feature of the tool is its eraser. "This is a vector-based tool with a raster erase," says Johnson. "You can scale an image up or down, and when you want to erase, you turn the pen over and it erases.
end quote.
I like software solutions to specific problems, especially those that can be developed by small teams. Unix like.
It seems to be just erasing by adding "transparent strokes" which I've never seen before. It would make it harder for an application like painter to use this technique because how many layers would you remove. But for sketching it seems ideal.
Re:Why its not the same (Score:1)
It seems to be just erasing by adding "transparent strokes" which I've never seen before.
Either that, or it's using region subtraction.
Just like a pencil... (Score:2)
In short, it's a digital pencil which works like a pencil, looks like a pencil and still gives a digital output :)
Nice mixture of old and new - now, I prefer to see what I'm drawing AND the pen together (like on paper) , which sucks when I draw on a tablet. All that said, I'm not a graphic artist and all I draw are random linesout of the bag (Score:2, Interesting)
I recognize this... (Score:5, Funny)
You see, Mr Incredible is running through the forest because he doesn't want to get caught. Watch him hit this spin move right there (scribbles line on screen) - and when the henchmen try to close the gap (marks an X on henchman's forehead) he cuts back and completely dodges their tackle. (unrelated doodle) I wish I had him on my team when I was coaching. (play-by-play announcer slaps forehead and shakes his head)
Re:I recognize this... (Score:1)
Madden never passes on an opportunity to discuss food.
Re:I recognize this... (Score:1)
Brilliant, John. Absof'inglutely brilliant.
Gromit does this in Linux (Score:2, Interesting)
Take 1 tablet (Score:2)
Re:Why not a XServe with a CinemaDisplay bolted on (Score:2)
Line Widths (Score:1)
Re:Line Widths (Score:1)
Re:Line Widths (Score:1)
Gromit, similar open source tool (Score:2, Informative)
Couple it with an application to take screenshots, and you're set.
What a lot of people seem to be missing: (Score:5, Informative)
The thing that is so useful about their program is not that you can sketch over the top of a picture. You can do that on a hundred different programs out there.
The big thing is that the sketches are completely integrated into their pipeline. This means that if someone makes a sketch on an image, anyone working on that show can view that sketch when they're viewing that image. They can view the sketch when they're working in their 3d package - they can view the sketch when they're working in their compositing package. It's all saved, tracked and displayed automatically.
I work at a major European Visual Effects/Post Production studio, and that kind of stuff can be tricky. Tracking all your resources, integrating all your software, that kind of thing. It's all to do with workflow making sure everything is working smoothly for everybody from Render Support through to Producers, Animators and TDs.
Re:What a lot of people seem to be missing: (Score:2)
Re:What a lot of people seem to be missing: (Score:2)
You mean mod points are for THAT?
I thought they were for modding up people who say...
"Bah, this is nothing, I hacked up a similar thing back in the 40s on my 8 Hz proto Linux box which I made from a used radar tube and gave to Walt Disney. Nothing to see here, move along people (after modding me up for making some joke about old people in Korea)."
That's what mod points are for. How DARE you go against the /. culture of new product bashing!
This guy loves to scribble over shots. (Score:2)
Quote from the article (Score:2)
My first thought Tic-Tac-Toe. I guess Hangman's just as good, but perhaps Pictionary would be more appropriate.
Using Maya? (Score:1)
I remember reading somewhere that they had their own animation software... Marionette I think it was called.
Re:Using Maya? (Score:1)
They model in Maya, Lightwave, Alias Studio Tools
Pixar the company (Score:1)
This is an excellent insight as to what really makes Pixar a success! Who can doubt they will be leading the market for years to come?
How many of us can say we work i
they need it for PDF / word processing (Score:1)
My first reaction to this was, why don't they open source it? It doesn't really give competitive advantages to them, it's just a way to communicate better between teams.
It will become the next overpriced franklin covey tool.
[OT] another article on "Hero" (Score:2)
Re:Bah. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Bah. (Score:3, Insightful)
If there were a free alternative that could actualyl compete to such expensive programs as LW and Maya, don't you think companies would have adopted them by now?
Open source is nice, but just because it's open source doesn't mean it's better.
Re:Bah. (Score:2)
Re:Bah. (Score:3, Funny)
Damn. You're right, it's tough!
Re:Bah. (Score:2)
Re:Bah. (Score:2)
Different programs for different uses, CinePaint is not a replacement for all software and that includes video editing/authoring software(including proprietary).
Re:Bah. (Score:1, Interesting)
Professional programs inspire the community to create free programs that have similar functionality - MS office->OpenOffice, Unix->Linux & BSD, Adobe Photoshop->GIMP, IE->Mozilla & Opera. That said, I expect that somewhere between a month from now and 2 years, there wil
Re:Bah. (Score:1)
It was: Mosaic --> Netscape Navigator --> Internet Explorer
Mozilla is just the latest incarnation of Navigator. Claiming it was a reaction to Internet Explorer is just 100% batshit daffy.
Move over, Da Vinci Code (Score:1)
> "and even includes a discussion of the tool's naming"
"Wow! I can't wait to read that riveting piece of journalism!"
Absolutely! With an obscure name like "The Review Sketch tool" the mystery is killing me. It's like something out of the Necronomicon! Or "The Da Vinci Code"! Only exactly the opposite!
(It's clearly a slow Friday alright... Anyone up for UT2004?)
Ummm ... (Score:2)
Let's see ....
It replaced a process by which they would project a video onto a white board and then need to take digital stills of it in order to preserve the work.
Now the director can sketch on the video and actually do playback with the additions on it, save it to disk, and re-use it later. Mark up items for moving and del
Re:Ummm ... (Score:1)
1) Skim read the post + (maybe) the first half of the article
2) Find some vaguely similar idea in some unrelated system that has a tiny part of the functionality the article is about.
3) Write an insulting post about the stupidity of the system in the article and how $OTHER_SYSTEM has done this for years
4) ???
5) Bask in increased sense of self-importance and intelligence aft
Re:Ummm ... (Score:1, Offtopic)
6) post something to the effect of "in soviet Russia, stupidity proves you"
7) Profit!
=)
So What? (Score:1)
So the moonies are a little out there. Big deal. They didn't kill 20,000 Iraqis.