Animators had a few tricks up their slee...err gloves.Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjOVox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the ...
Easier to animate, yes, but also easier to streamline when everything was done by hand;
In black and white, some of the earliest animations showed black characters (like Mickey and Pete) without gloves and the hands blended in with the bodies during movement, so the white gloves helped break it up visually;
In Mickey’s case, they didn’t want to animate mouse hands (lol);
A direct connection to vaudeville, where performers traditionally wore gloves — apparently many early animators were also vaudeville performers.
Didn’t watch the video, but from what I know, hands are extremely tough to animate well, so they put larger gloves onto characters to make it more fluid.
Also, no one wants to see Mickey’s deformed rat feet
TL;DW anyone?
Several reasons:
Easier to animate, yes, but also easier to streamline when everything was done by hand;
In black and white, some of the earliest animations showed black characters (like Mickey and Pete) without gloves and the hands blended in with the bodies during movement, so the white gloves helped break it up visually;
In Mickey’s case, they didn’t want to animate mouse hands (lol);
A direct connection to vaudeville, where performers traditionally wore gloves — apparently many early animators were also vaudeville performers.
Awesome thanks!
Didn’t watch the video, but from what I know, hands are extremely tough to animate well, so they put larger gloves onto characters to make it more fluid.
Also, no one wants to see Mickey’s deformed rat feet
Speak for yourself.