You can see the automatically recognized facial features, that we talked about last time – the eyebrows, the pupils, the blinking and the mouth shapes, also appear. In the Scene panel you can see Vicky, our puppet, following my head movements. At first it has this darker vignette, but when you double click on it the program should find your face and show these red dots on it and blue dots on your pupils. You can see your face in the Camera & Microphone panel. Otherwise your puppet will not appear in the Record mode.Īs you can see, after clicking Add to New Scene, the Record mode turns on automatically. To transport your puppet to that mode, click on the Add to New Scene button at the bottom of the Project panel. To see your character move you need to be in Record mode. Rig is in blue because right now we are in Rig mode. Above all of this you can see four buttons saying Start, Rig, Record and Stream. When you double click it, the Puppet panel (in the center) will show your puppet and all of its layers. When you import your file you can see it appear in the Project panel on the left. And before we start rigging and playing around with our puppet, let’s explore the interface of Character Animator a little bit. You can do that by clicking File->Import and choosing your ai or psd file. Now that we have a project, we will import our puppet. Let’s create a new project!Īs you can see, it looks pretty much like the other Adobe programs. Today, get excited, because we will finally open Character Animator and bring life to your puppet!Īs I said, it’s time to open Character Animator. If you follow our series you already know how to create a basic puppet for this new Adobe application. Welcome to the 4th part of our tutorial series that aims to help you explore the incredible Adobe Character Animator.
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