Studio Ghibli’s first fully CGI movie will be ‘Aya and the Witch’

The next movie from the world renowned Studio Ghibli will be a departure from its previous efforts. The studio co-founded by Hayao Miyazaki is well-known for its expertise in traditional, hand-drawn animation, and only occasionally uses CGI in its fi...

NVIDIA’s latest RTX Studio drivers make Blender four times faster

NVIDIA's latest Studio RTX driver isn't just speeding up commercial production renderers like V-Ray. If you use the free, open-source Blender 3D animation software, you'll also get a boost, NVIDIA announced. With the new driver, the Blender Cycles re...

Live2D drawing technology from Cybernoids adds a little 3D spice to your hand drawn images

Live2D drawing technology adds a little 3D spice to your hand drawn images

While 3D graphics have been filling our eyes in cinemas and video games way before Nemo ever got lost, we've typically had to settle for computer generated artwork. Live2D from Cybernoids is a drawing technology that hopes to change that. The software lets animators and game creators give hand drawn 2D images rudimentary 3D qualities. In the video above you can see the character turn her head, and the image -- based solely on the 2D version -- twists and adapts in real-time. There are two versions of the software, one based on polygons, and the other vectors, and there is support for consoles and smartphones -- but no details on specifics at this time. The developers admit it's only suitable for limited movement, such as in dialog-based games, for now, but hope to have the tools to handle full 360 degree motions over the next two years. At least, for now, its way way further down on the creep-o-meter scale.

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Live2D drawing technology from Cybernoids adds a little 3D spice to your hand drawn images originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Aug 2012 09:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Incredible iPhone Diorama

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Dioramas, little three-dimensional playgrounds, have found an unlikely surface to be crafted on over an iPhone.

Meet the creation of Michael Ko. This was his graduation project of the 3d artist an animator, and damn it is impressive. Just think of all the work and thought put behind each single ...
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