A list of puns related to "Onionskin"
I've turned it on, I've set the colors, I've set the opacity, all my layers ore transparent, I've clicked the lightbulb, I've made sure that I have frames, I've changed the tint, I've restarted the whole damn process several times. I've been struggling with this for weeks and I've looked at every animation tutorial under the sun. It. Just. Won't. Work.
I'm running Krita 4.1.1 on Windows 8.1.
I'd honestly rather use Flipaclip at this point than fiddle with this crap any longer.
I have hit a particularly large batch of onionskin office records from the 20s. Does anyone have any particular preferred method for storing this stuff?
There are some glaring issues in the panelling, I know. I'm looking more for critique on my hook, dialogue, pacing, and general interest. Any and everything is welcome. I have technically posted this before, but it was more of a request for "beta" readers rather than a request for public critique, and it has changed quite a bit since then. Its 60 in print pages so far, just for fair warning.
Here's the link:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1H9PSC1EPwklwQzJHvSJ4VhF0hq16fqeS1kRC7LV3ZiI/edit?usp=drivesdk
Thanks everyone.
I'm looking for a way to practice my frame by frames on-the-go, for Android. But all the apps I find will only show an onionskin for ONE previous frame.
I'm looking for something that'll show BOTH onionskins for the Next and Last frame. Let me keyframe, for goodness sake! EVEN BETTER if it can show multiple frames forward or backwards.
Has anybody stumbled across a Free or Pay-For app that allows for this functionality? Thankyou!
IS there some sort of onionskin on the Animation Editor? Like, so you could see a previous or future keyframe albeit transparent? I'm trying t align the feet to the ground, but the animation editor is just not letting me align it properly.
I still remember writing long letters on onionskin paper. In the modern age of email, it has now been over a decade since I hand wrote a long letter. But I still miss the paper.
While 90g Clairfontaine paper does a decent job, surely I can buy notebooks made with real onionskin paper somewhere?
This is essentially a publishing question. I'm trying to find a copy of Les Miserables (Victor Hugo) that is printed on onionskin paper (or possibly scritta or lightweight offset). Think paper like bibles are typically printed on. Is there any way to identify what type of paper an edition is printed on? Or if you own this book on paper like this, could you share the ISBN or what edition it is?
I'm working on an art project for Les Mis and want to use pages of the book, so I'm trying to find a used copy, but without knowing which version would have the right paper I'm at a loss for what to buy.
I want to show some of my previous sketches along with my main sketches during my animation.
Yes I know where the onionskin option is in the settings, but despite being checked, I see no onionskins. Any help?
For the crispiest sex experience possible.
Have an old animation done in Premiere Pro 1.5, I want to render it out as some kind of movie file format and put it into a program that I can onionskin over it, frame by frame - does anything like this exist (preferably FOSS!)
I know how to use the feature the whenever I do my hands shiver and always end up doing it bad can you give me some advice / videos
The funeral director was asking us what we think Mum should wear in her casket.
Mum always loved to wear sarongs (fabric wraps that go around the torso and drape downward a bit like a long skirt would), so my uncle suggested that she wear a sarong in there.
The funeral director looked a bit confused, as did some of our family members, to which my uncle added:
"What's sarong with that?"
I started laughing like an idiot. He was proud of it too. The funeral director was rather shocked. We assured her, and our more proper relatives, that Mum would've absolutely loved the joke (which is very true).
His delivery was perfect. I'll never forget the risk he took. We sometimes recall the moment as a way help cushion the blows of the grieving process.
--Edit-- I appreciate the condolences. I'm doing well and the worst is behind me and my family. But thanks :)
--Edit-- Massive thanks for all the awards and kind words. And the puns! Love 'em.
I would have a daughter
Capital of Ireland
It's Dublin everyday
But Bill kept the Windows
True story; it even happened last night. My 5-year-old son walks up behind me and out of the blue says, "hey."
I turn to him and say, "yeah, kiddo? What's up?"
He responds, "it's dead grass."
I'm really confused and trying to figure out what's wrong and what he wants from me. "What? There's dead grass? What's wrong with that?"
.
.
.
He says, totally straight-faced, "hay is dead grass," and runs off.
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