lightskintwin
Banned
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3R3cvbLsbAk&t
Animators had a few tricks up their slee...err gloves.
Animators had a few tricks up their slee...err gloves.
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Then at the end it asks the question: Why does Daffy Duck wear this collar-thing around his neck?[/spoiler]
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Really good. Always wondered that.
For people who don't wanna watch the video:Many antropomorphic cartoon characters in the early days of animation were drawn completely black (like Felix the Cat, Mickey Mouse, etc.). You couldn't see black hands (or feet) on a black body (or any kind of black background) very well. So at one point they added gloves, which was also a reference to old Vaudeville shows. When Vaudeville shows started to dissapear, gloves on cartoon characters stayed because people basically expected them on cartoon characters.
That's why characters like Goofy, Mickey Mouse or Bugs Bunny look...honestly kinda weird whitout their gloves on.
Also gloves saved time animating.
Then at the end it asks the question: Why does Daffy Duck wear this collar-thing around his neck?
Really nice, very informative, pretty cool.
Really good. Always wondered that.
For people who don't wanna watch the video:Many antropomorphic cartoon characters in the early days of animation were drawn completely black (like Felix the Cat, Mickey Mouse, etc.). You couldn't see black hands (or feet) on a black body (or any kind of black background) very well. So at one point they added gloves, which was also a reference to old Vaudeville shows. When Vaudeville shows started to dissapear, gloves on cartoon characters stayed because people basically expected them on cartoon characters.
That's why characters like Goofy, Mickey Mouse or Bugs Bunny look...honestly kinda weird whitout their gloves on.
Also gloves saved time animating.
Then at the end it asks the question: Why does Daffy Duck wear this collar-thing around his neck?
Really nice, very informative, pretty cool.
Can't look at the video now but some say the idea came from the ...actual white gloves animators used to don't smudge the ink when rubbing the hand for support
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Is that the same lady 50 years later?
Thankfully ink costs nothing, even back then.A lot of it was to save ink as well
Ties and bows like Fred Flintstone and Yoghi bear like to use. Good stuff.
Scarfs/ascots/turtlenecks are also very useful at saving time. Anything that splits body parts helps.
Ties and bows like Fred Flintstone and Yoghi bear like to use. Good stuff.
Yes.Bugs Bunny has gloves on?
What's mario's excuse though
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Probably designed with Western characters like Mickey Mouse in mind. Sonic wears them too, but his look was influenced by Mickey and Felix the Cat.What's mario's excuse though
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What's mario's excuse though
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What's mario's excuse though
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This one is actually a bit different. All the 30's/40's stuff like Looney Toons, Tom & Jerry, and Disney's theatrical shorts had a huge Hollywood budget. So they had big armies of animators who would redraw every frame, which is why everything looked so fluid and kinetic:
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But later, once TV came along, the budgets got way smaller and more output on a shorter time frame was needed. Joe Hanna and William Barbera were among the first to really figure out some good tricks to solve the problem. If you notice every single character here has something around their neck:
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Designing them this way made it easy to animate shots where the only the head needs to be animated and they could just draw the body once. It's also why most of them have a "muzzle" of some kind... so the mouth could just move in some cases without drawing the rest of the head. It's also why all those characters have that signature Hanna Barbera walk where the body stays stiff and the arms don't move, only the legs.
Or sometimes they'd draw the head once and animate the body in limited ways.
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Interesting stuff.
You've never seen a plumber wear gloves?
Very cool post.
That's not Bugs Bunny, it's a separate character that predates Bugs' official debut by two years. Many traits from from this rabbit character were later transferred to Bugs, but at the same time there's traits that are uncharacteristic of Bugs. Also the rabbit doesn't have Bugs' voice, it's more in line with Woody Woodpecker.I imagine both Bugs Bunny and Mario were designed with gloves simply because cartoon characters have gloves so they've gotta have gloves too.
I mean, the first ever bugs bunny short didn't even have 'em in gloves:
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...despite it being black and white. You'd think it would be there for clarity's sake as usual, but nope.
Edit: Actually my bad. Early Mario was given gloves for the sake of bringing clarity to the rough 8-bit animation.
Mickey yeah probably, but in Bugs' case I think by the time of his creation it had already become a cartoon cliche of sorts to wear gloves, so he was made to wear gloves. Bugs first appeared in 1940, 12 years after Mickey's official debut and 11 years after Mickey first wore gloves.So basically Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny are Black?
What's mario's excuse though
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Mickey yeah probably, but in Bugs' case I think by the time of his creation it had already become a cartoon cliche of sorts to wear gloves, so he was made to wear gloves. Bugs first appeared in 1940, 12 years after Mickey's official debut and 11 years after Mickey first wore gloves.
You've never seen a plumber wear gloves?
That's not Bugs Bunny, it's a separate character that predates Bugs' official debut by two years. Many traits from from this rabbit character were later transferred to Bugs, but at the same time there's traits that are uncharacteristic of Bugs. Also the rabbit doesn't have Bugs' voice, it's more in line with Woody Woodpecker.
I understand that the character is not technically "Bugs Bunny", but he's basically Bug's Australopithecus. It has been stated that the character eventually became bugs bunny multiple times.
Ultimately the point of my post was that Bugs didn't really need gloves at that point in animation history but he most likely has them because it was a common and increasingly iconic trope.
Same reason, he's wearing gloves from Super Mario World onwards. Even his NES sprites take care to delineate where his hands are at all time so his run cycle reads properly to the eye.
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So yeah, Sonic, Mario and Crash Bandicoot all have their hands contrast with the rest of their bodies for exactly the same reason animators put gloves on their cartoon characters.
Thankfully ink costs nothing, even back then.
Didn't they poke fun at the white gloves in A Goofy Movie?
The clip is within the first minute of the video.