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Blender 2.5 Character Animation Cookbook

You're reading from   Blender 2.5 Character Animation Cookbook With this highly focused book you‚Äôll learn how to bring your characters to life using Blender, employing everything from realistic movement to refined eye control. Written in a user-friendly manner, it‚Äôs the only guide dedicated to this subject.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2011
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849513203
Length 308 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Virgilio Carlo de Menezes Vasconcelos Virgilio Carlo de Menezes Vasconcelos
Author Profile Icon Virgilio Carlo de Menezes Vasconcelos
Virgilio Carlo de Menezes Vasconcelos
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Blender 2.5 Character Animation Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Get Rigging FREE CHAPTER 2. Rigging the Torso 3. Eying Animation 4. Poker Face? Facial Rigging 5. Hands Down! The Limbs Controllers 6. Blending with the Animation Workflow 7. Easy to Say, Hard to Do: Mastering the Basics 8. Shake That Body: The Mechanics of Body Movement 9. Spicing it Up: Animation Refinement 10. Drama King: Acting in Animation Planning Your Animation Index

Introduction


The face is the most complex part of the human body to set up. We spend our entire lives looking at human faces, and we're pretty good at detecting the subtlest changes and what they mean emotionally. It's a tough job trying to replicate this amount of complexity in CG: from the carefully built mesh topology to the detailed shading, texturing, and—of course—the animation controllers and movements.

The more you try to build a realistic human face in CG, the more details you have to add in order to avoid the uncanny valley effect. This terms refers to a hypothesis in the field of robotics which holds that the human observers tend to be repulsed by something that looks and moves barely like a human being: if it's not exactly like a human nor a clear abstraction of it (like a cartoon character), the observers notice that there's something "wrong" or "strange" to the character—often referred to as "zombie like".

There are books dedicated to the subject of facial rigging, and it wouldn...

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