VirtiaJay
Jakhi Duncan   Canton, Ohio, United States
 
 
I Go Away.
I Come Back.
I Stay.
I Go.
Currently Online
Recent Activity
34 hrs on record
last played on 23 Nov
5.8 hrs on record
last played on 19 Nov
25 hrs on record
last played on 17 Nov
VirtiaJay 24 Dec, 2018 @ 4:41pm 
Same to you!

Hope christmas for you goes well.
⛧One Two⛧ 16 Sep, 2018 @ 11:41am 
+rep:
- Amazing SGT
- Friendly
- You can trust him
- Good shot

- SGT Refall (ondy)
VirtiaJay 21 Jun, 2018 @ 5:25pm 
@Nonamesleft~ Woah! Thanks for the tips... I can't tell you how much this will help me. Maybe once i get some things done maybe i can share my progress with you. I didn't really expect a reply since i am a small time. But i thank you so very much.

Also i hope you get your items in the game!

See you soon--!

-MusiqJay
Nonamesleft~ 21 Jun, 2018 @ 3:42pm 
You're right in assuming im not great at tutorials, but i could give you a quick few tips to start out. Take my advice with a grain of salt since im not really sure the best way to go about learning to animate. It's really down to each person.
Nonamesleft~ 21 Jun, 2018 @ 3:42pm 
The way i learned in the beginning (before i took animation seriously) was mainly just trial and error, messing around for fun. Nothing better than just going in there with no experience to get a feel for things. For me, it was the addiction of bringing something to life from nothing that kept me going, even if it turned out terrible. That just made me grind out animations and learn from just doing. So number 1 priority should be to have fun. It's easy to fall in a pit of worrying about getting good. Learn at you're own pace. Make a ton of terrible animations and you'll eventually make a good one. Try to learn something from every animation you make. Even if it looks terrible in the end, you'll still have succeeded if you learned something from it and had fun creating it. If you really are 15 years old then that's great if you start animating now. I didn't start until i was 19!
Nonamesleft~ 21 Jun, 2018 @ 3:42pm 
In terms of schooling, i would recommend online courses such as iAnimate or Animation Mentor if you really, really want to take animation seriously. You may have to finish highschool first though. These can be really useful to get a good idea of industry standards, and how profressional animators way better than myself get things done.

It's impossible to just give quick advice that'll suddenly make you great at animation, so a longer term course would be the way to go. Even the best animators were terrible at some point. Just gotta put in the hours and have fun.