In episode 71 we start a conversation that will definitely continue in future episodes of the podcast: our memories and experiences with Blender Open Movies. Initially inspired by the CG Cookie film review, this episode sees us going back all the way to Elephants Dream! What does this film mean? What were the most memorable moments of the production? Thanks to the great narration of Andy, a lot of behind-the-scene moments are unveiled! Join us and find out more.
In this podcast: Andy, Hjalti, Julien and Francesco
Music: Blabetté de Metz (Psy-Jazz Mix) - (cc-by-nc) keytronic
Fantastic podcast, guys! Thanks!
I just watched a video Pablo posted 7 years ago showing off Cycles. I started using Blender almost 3 years ago and, for me, Cycles has always been there. I know Eevee is all the rage right now, but since Brecht is at the institute now, would it be possible to have him and/or Sergei on the podcast to talk a little about the history of Cycles?
@Armando Tello: +1 A history of Cycles and the roadmap would be super useful.
I do have a question for the podcast: What is the dependency graph? It gets mentioned in conversations about Blender 2.8 ... but I have no idea what it is.
Hi guys! First of all, A BIG thanks for the awesome Spring video production logs!
1st question: You are using Attract to do the production tracking of a collaborative/team project. Do you use anything else to manage personal/individual projects? I mean like a ToDo list or something like that.
2nd question: When is Pablo Vazquez get some time to share some tutorials and files in the Art Gallery section? No new Venom's Lab? Then we could use Venom's Workshops with updates for Carnerito, Tibolito, Merlin, ... :)
As always, fantastic Podcast!
This may be an awesome opportunity to work into a feature I heard a lot requested by animators,, an animatable pivot point! :) Maybe it could be sliped into Code Quest? hehehe
Cheers!
Hi guys. I love this podcast — always entertaining and informative. In this episode, @Hjalti Hjalmarsson mentions rigging a staff ... which reminded me of a tutorial I saw a little while ago for animating the rotation point of a sword.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PywmFD5jNEY
Not sure if this helps with your specific rigging challenge or how it compares to BlenRig, but I thought it might be useful.
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