These are beyond outstanding! Thank you for taking the time to put these together! You’re not a tutor by chance, are you? I am in dire need of the dragon frame training and have yet to find a good video on it!
Yeah, Dragon frame tutorial videos have always been hard to find, at least for free. They have SOME on the site but not a lot and I honestly don't know enough myself to be totally confident doing one. I could do one with the basics I guess....I guess Dragonframe is just obscure enough that major video tutorial companies don't think to cover it. You could check those pay tutorial sites, if you can find one that does Dragonframe, it might be worth the free trial or just a one month's subscription to see those vids.
@@artschoolabridged9940 couldn’t agree more on the lack of training and tips on the platform. And thank you for such a thoughtful reply! Your videos have helped me a great deal! I’ll scope out some of the skillshare’s and whatnot to see what’s out there. Thanks again and keep producing!
@@kyleanderson2949 Yeah, if you find anything, please link it here! I have so much more I could do videos about. It's just a matter of having the time and energy. I'm thinking I could do an intro to puppet making video in the next few days though! Just talking through build up versus cast methods of puppet making and wire versus ball and socket armature
Way late but I'll answer anyway. Huh. Not sure what you mean. Is there a reflection that gives away that there's glass there? Maybe adjust your lighting? Or your focus is auto-focusing on the glass rather than what is beyond it? You could try plexiglass but I'm pretty sure (from knowing a little about glass) that Plexi won't have the same optical clarity. Like there might be a slight haze to everything when seen through plexiglass. I would try adjusting your lighting angle or camera angle. Maybe your camera isn't totally perpendicular to the surface of the glass?
Thank you for your content!
These are beyond outstanding! Thank you for taking the time to put these together! You’re not a tutor by chance, are you? I am in dire need of the dragon frame training and have yet to find a good video on it!
Yeah, Dragon frame tutorial videos have always been hard to find, at least for free. They have SOME on the site but not a lot and I honestly don't know enough myself to be totally confident doing one. I could do one with the basics I guess....I guess Dragonframe is just obscure enough that major video tutorial companies don't think to cover it. You could check those pay tutorial sites, if you can find one that does Dragonframe, it might be worth the free trial or just a one month's subscription to see those vids.
@@artschoolabridged9940 couldn’t agree more on the lack of training and tips on the platform. And thank you for such a thoughtful reply! Your videos have helped me a great deal!
I’ll scope out some of the skillshare’s and whatnot to see what’s out there. Thanks again and keep producing!
@@kyleanderson2949 Yeah, if you find anything, please link it here!
I have so much more I could do videos about. It's just a matter of having the time and energy. I'm thinking I could do an intro to puppet making video in the next few days though! Just talking through build up versus cast methods of puppet making and wire versus ball and socket armature
So I'm trying to avoid the glass plane being visible on a colored background, do think is it better to use plexiglas than regular glass?
Way late but I'll answer anyway. Huh. Not sure what you mean. Is there a reflection that gives away that there's glass there? Maybe adjust your lighting? Or your focus is auto-focusing on the glass rather than what is beyond it? You could try plexiglass but I'm pretty sure (from knowing a little about glass) that Plexi won't have the same optical clarity. Like there might be a slight haze to everything when seen through plexiglass.
I would try adjusting your lighting angle or camera angle. Maybe your camera isn't totally perpendicular to the surface of the glass?