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Lip sync chart
Lip sync chart









lip sync chart

This is the difference between getting swallowed up in every last detail and paying attention to reality. These are reference charts to show the differences more clearly Not only does the 2nd gif take less frames and energy to make, it’s more relaxed, it looks less distracting, and his lips are much easier to read! They blend together, sometimes to the point where the shape doesn’t change at all! People talk quickly and the mouth doesn’t have the time to get into each shape.

lip sync chart

You don’t need them! Making each shape is unnatural. Don’t do this.^Īn easy way to tell if you’re animating lip sync wrong is if you run out of frames to make each shape. Since you’re going frame by frame, your audio is slow enough that you can make each shape slowly and distinctly and you can get each individual phoneme down in the animation.

lip sync chart

What’s easiest is to say it yourself and pay attention to the shapes your mouth is making. When you do lip sync, you want some kind of reference to make sure it’s right Phonemes are just the shape your mouth makes when you make certain sounds.

#Lip sync chart how to#

They’re just gifs so no sound, but you should still be able to tell that he’s saying “I’d say a solid B… Solid B minus.”Īnyone who’s looked up how to do lip sync has seen phoneme charts. I’m going to use a bit of unfinished lip sync from my taz animated part as reference. I mentioned on twitter that I wanted to do a lip sync tutorial and immediately got some people who were interested so I put one together real quick!











Lip sync chart