˜yĐÄvlog

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rotoscoping

[ roh-toh-skoh-ping ]

noun

  1. Movies, Graphic Arts. Also called °ů´Ç¡łŮ´Ç. an animation technique that traces live-action footage and transforms it into animated sequences by use of a rotoscope, which was largely replaced by digital technology by the end of the 20th century.
  2. Digital Technology. a technique of merging live-action footage with digital animation and other graphics to create composite images.


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˜yĐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of rotoscoping1

First recorded in 1960–65; roto ( def ) + scop(e) ( def ) + -ing 1( def ); applied to a technique invented in 1915 by Polish-born U.S. animator and film director Max Fleischer (1883–1972)
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The deceptively simple-looking “Ghost Cat Anzu” is actually idiosyncratically drawn from live-action frames in a rotoscoping process.

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Kuno normally makes animated films without rotoscoping, “so it was a very wonderful experience for me. I realized that the performances of actors were really rich. Normally, I’m just creating characters inside my head, but in this case, I could rely on the actors.”

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It meant visual effects had to do a lot more rotoscoping, match-moves and camera tracking, but in doing so, it gave the team the ability to tightly control character performance.

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Each section has a wildly different look, from computer animation to CGI to rotoscoping to live-action stick puppets and actors.

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This isn’t the first time he has used animation layered over live performances, and this digital rotoscoping technique is especially attuned to nuances of gesture and facial expression.

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