A reel with final projects from last semester is up on youtube. Next to a short version, I also uploaded this extended version:
This blog contains the digital workbooks of the students who take ARIL-360 / ARIL-421 at Montclair State University.
A reel with final projects from last semester is up on youtube. Next to a short version, I also uploaded this extended version:
Now that the semester is over I can safely tell you that in Maya you can actually have the computer do everything for you. Just watch this tutorial (via the Hollywood ASIFA Educators Mailing List)
If you think the machines in the lab are rendering slowly, look at the task manager. You will see that Metal Ray is only using about a maximum of 25&perc; of the power: two out of four CPU cores
Googled for a solution, found one on Creative Cow: Go to the Batch Render Options (hit the box) and under Parallellism, turn off Auto Render Threads and set Render Threads to 8. Turning off Render on network machines may also be needed.
Happy Rendering
If you think animating in Maya is tedious, consider this:
This movie was actually made by moving individual atoms. Here is a "Making Of"
This blog contains the digital workbooks of students at Montclair State University. In fall, it was dedicated to "ARIL-360: Motion, Light, Texture, Mapping", and in spring to "ARIL-421: Advanced Animation and Illustartion Arts".
I have since moved on to Monmouth University, where my students post to this blog
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