@AdobeAnimate
  @AdobeAnimate
Adobe Animate | Swaying the ears (17/25) @AdobeAnimate | Uploaded February 2021 | Updated October 2024, 7 hours ago.
This video is a part of the - "Create TV/Broadcast Ready Animations with Adobe Animate" series. In this series, Prof. Greg Araya from the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) teaches how to create TV and broadcast ready animations with Adobe Animate. You can download Adobe Animate from adobe.com/in/products/animate.html.

Use eases and Classic Tweens to add overlapping action to the ear.

What you learned: Overlapping action and follow-through can be achieved with Classic Tweening of Symbols as effectively as Shape Tweening of Shapes.
* When animating a Symbol, remember to set the pivot point position before setting any Keyframes. If you don’t, you may end up animating the position of the pivot point, which can lead to unexpected results.
* Being mindful of your timing notes, set the Keyframes for the ear Symbol which you will go on to translate and Classic Tween.
* Once your Keyframes are set, rotate and skew the ear Symbol so it is positioned to swing and lag in time with the whiskers.
* Add Classic Tweens to the entire frame span and playback to check the motion.
* Eases can be set on your tween spans to favor or “cushion” the spacing closer to a keyframe.
* If you are coming to Animate from a traditional animation background, be aware that the “in” and “out” designations for eases are opposite from what you are used to. Just think in terms of negative eases favoring the start Keyframe and positive eases favoring the target Keyframe.
* Save your incremental progress as a new file.
Swaying the ears (17/25)Adobe Animate | How to export sprite sheet and Texture atlas from AnimateAdobe Animate | Creating gradients in AnimateBuilding a fence (22/25)

Swaying the ears (17/25) @AdobeAnimate

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER