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We've all been pretty excited about how the speakeasy is looking in the comp process.  It's awaiting a few more lighting tweaks and some atmospheric hazy smoke, but this is the almost-final version.

There's a full size video version here, since it gets crunched pretty badly in GIF format.

There's also a video of the image below, featuring the multitude of steps it took to get to this stage.

The #6 Compositing step is abbreviated to Animation and Background, but it's really more involved than that. A whole lot of ambient lighting, color adjustment, finagling shadow tone and density, atmospherics and effects, highlights and things of that nature go into it as well.

Storyboard by Kelly Turnbull
Rough animation by Fable Siegel
Cleanup by Alex Harrier
Comp by Matt Pichette
Layout by Newt
Background art by Frog!

Files

Comments

Nelly Galan

It looks amazing!!!

Keri Horn

Y’all!!!!! This looks GREAT! So excited for the progress y’all are making!!!! *excited gif*

Anonymous

This is so amazing to see! The characters in the distance, are they drawn full size and composited in smaller or are they drawn to scale? I’m just curious if you have to use different line weight to make it look right?

Anonymous

She’s beautiful

Nova

I love! The animation on her tail is so extra and I am here for it💜

Minzoku Bokumetsu

NICE (though I have to admit Niantic + Craftar has tainted the word "ingress" for me)

Carl Strojny

Looks really good.

Katie (kfrances)

this is so, so, so good. i'm super excited to see the film when it's complete- and i'm dragging several people down with me :))

lackadaisy

The background characters are distance models - they are a bit lighter on line weight and details like whiskers and pin-stripes. They also have simpler lighting drawn onto them. The animation is vector art, so the animators can zoom in and detail them out without restraint, but lots of detail tends to just muddle things that are small within a scene. Lower detail actually makes it easier to discern the character overall, as it mimics the way our eyes naturally perceive things in the distance.

Anonymous

U mean lifting them up :D