

In CrazyTalk7, however, the core animation is now much more robust, but we’ll get into that later.) Then you tweak auto-motion profiles (also new to CT7), adjust specific animations, and tweak individual expressions to taste. (In past versions, the auto animation was limited mainly to mouth movement with a median level of eye blinking to go with it. While CrazyTalk Animator is designed for more complex 2D animations that include sets and fully animated figures, the original CrazyTalk franchise is designed to simplify animation for “talking-head”-type pieces by having mouth animation interpreted automatically off the syllables and phonemes in an audio track and applied to a mapped picture or drawing.

That’s when we looked more deeply at Reallusion’s CrazyTalk7 (CT7), the smaller, older brother of the larger CrazyTalk Animator. As we discussed this concept, we looked at different animation options that have been used for other animated shows, but all of them required a much greater force of animators that we had at our disposal.

The concept of a true talk show that’s entirely animated hasn’t really been explored to my knowledge. When our affiliate– the magazine for the Gothic arts community, DarkestGoth Magazine–needed a cutting edge video talk show that pushed the boundaries of microbudget creation, we looked at the notion of making it an animated show.
#Reallusion crazytalk pro 6.0 software#
Hanke on | 0 commentsĬrazyTalk7 Pro Publisher: Reallusion, Inc.ĭescription: Photo/drawing animation/warping software
