4.3 TIMING AND SPACING STEWDIOUS
Across
- 4. : A frame where specific values (position, rotation, scale) are set for an object.
- 6. : The number of frames used for an action, determining its speed and duration.
- 7. : The pattern of timing that creates flow in animation.
- 8. : When a pose remains on screen for multiple frames without movement.
- 10. : The total number of frames in a shot or sequence.
- 12. : Frames after an action completes before returning to neutral.
- 19. : Frames where a hitbox or action is effective.
- 20. : The delay between an event and a character’s response.
- 22. : The distance an object travels between consecutive frames over time.
- 23. : Frames created between keyframes to complete motion.
- 25. : A visual representation of how an attribute changes over time.
- 28. : A visual effect simulating fast spacing between frames.
- 29. : An effect created by increasing the number of frames for an action.
Down
- 1. : Frames before an action becomes active.
- 2. : The total length of time an animation or action lasts, measured in frames or seconds.
- 3. :A tangent type that creates constant motion with even spacing.
- 5. : The horizontal frame track where keyframes are placed to control timing.
- 9. (FPS) : The number of frames displayed per second of animation.
- 11. : A secondary keyframe placed between main poses to refine spacing.
- 13. : Movement achieved with fewer frames and wider spacing.
- 14. : The perceived heaviness of an object created through timing and spacing.
- 15. :A smooth tangent type that creates natural ease-in and ease-out spacing.
- 16. : A single still image in a sequence of motion.
- 17. : A numerical display (hours:minutes:seconds:frames) used to identify exact timing positions.
- 18. :A tool used to adjust animation curves that control spacing.
- 21. : Movement with even spacing between frames.
- 24. : The overall speed and flow of a sequence.
- 26. : Handles that shape how motion enters or exits a keyframe.
- 27. : The rate at which frames are displayed during viewing.