How Pre-Production Can Make or Break Your Animation Project
The pre-production process of 3D animation involves
the initial aspects of an animated film. This process includes the concept
creation, storyboards, rough script reel, and character creation. With
these steps complete, the animation production pipeline is ready to move to the
production process
Every
successful animation campaign requires good pre-production. It’s essential to
start every project on the right foot and it helps project development run
smoothly and more effectively. This is when you set the road for success in
your production.
However,
the pre-production process in animation is not clear for many agencies. The
pre-production process for live-action, a radio spot, or even social media
doesn’t apply when it comes to motion graphics. Since each medium has its
specific demands, it’s important to understand how to better prepare your team
for any motion project. Let’s look at the stages in pre-production for
animation and what’s important to keep in mind when developing each part of
your project.
Why is animation
pre-production so important?
It’s the best time
for modifications
One
of the reasons pre-production is so important is because this is where you’ll
probably receive the most feedback from your clients.
It’s
not rare to see clients changing their minds in the middle of this stage — and
you should expect that. Changing things during the pre-production phase is much
easier than doing so down the road, which could drastically impact budgets and
schedules. Therefore, the more you can communicate with the client and have
them sign off on this stage, the easier it will be to move forward.
Even
though you can expect some back-and-forth in this early phase, pre-production
still takes less time than the design and animation stages. And the more time you
invest here the better it will be for the team because they’ll have a clear
understanding of what to do and what to expect moving forward. Clients will
have a solid understanding of what’s to come and any “bad surprises” can be
prevented as clear pre-production puts everyone on the same page.
It shapes the
animation
The
biggest reason why you should give extra attention to pre-production in
animation is that this is the place where the animation starts to get shaped.
Instead of only figuring out how things will work and move once you get to the
animation stage, this initial phase allows you to anticipate challenges. Also,
you can achieve a much richer result when you handle pre-production properly.
Take
the Script and Storyboard stages. Most of the time, scripts lay out what the
voiceover will be saying throughout the video. However, not all information
needs to be transmitted in voiceover. Sometimes, the best way to describe a
thought or explain something is to show instead of just tell.
At
the same time, paying close attention to the construction of the storyboard
helps to foresee and plan clever transitions while helping the client get a
better perspective of the true potential of the video you are creating. In the
end, the more time you allow here the better the end result.
It affects the
budget and the technical needs of a project
Deciding
when you lock the creative direction has a direct impact on the production
scope. During the early strategy work, you may visualize new opportunities to
expand beyond a single animation. Or, the narrative and visual style may
suddently demand more characters than was previously expected. Everything can
change at this point, and it’s not bad. It’s just the natural way a creative
concept evolves, and you should be open and allow that to happen.
However,
due to the number of people, talents, and time required to produce an
animation, late-stage changes are costly. These changes will impact many
different points of production so you have to account for this and be smart about
budget allocation. The more you spend in pre-production, the better setup you
are for future stages.
A Pre-Production Checklist for Animation Projects
Good pre-production is essential for
any successful motion piece. Our pre-production guide will help you ensure
you've covered everything needed to start your projects on the right foot.
Get the Guide
What is
pre-production in animation?
When
talking about pre-production, we’re referring to the stages that precede the
animation stage. More specifically, this comes before we get to the point where
every scene of a video is illustrated, the voiceover is recorded, and before
any kind of movement is designed at all. It consists of strategy,
scriptwriting, style development, and storyboarding. But even though some of
those stages may not be a surprise for those experienced in live-action
development, the way they should be approached in animation is unique.
Strategy
Your
animation strategy aligns the campaign’s end goal with the creative direction.
Strategy planning in pre-production is when the narrative style and the
technical requirements of the animation are defined. It sets how everything
should move and define the limitations of the project. The strategy tells us
how we are going to reach the target audience, which type of animation should
be pursued (motion graphics, character-based, typography, cel animation, etc.),
as well as the duration and format of our animation piece. The strategy should
always connect the client’s brand with the message they want to send to their
customers.
Scriptwriting
This
stage in pre-production helps to shape the narrative style and the flow of the
story. A good script is dynamic and has a natural flow, which helps set the
animation’s rhythm and gets viewers engaged.
Just
as with animation strategy, the script should be clear enough to send the
message but also respect the constraints of duration needed for the piece. A
great script is like great video editing: what you remove is more important
than what you put in. It’s easy to fill a script document with many words and
elaborated sentences that won’t contribute to either the message’s clarity or
the animation’s flow. Investing the time to reduce and shape a script is
extremely valuable for any project.
Keep
in mind that squeezing a lot of words into just a few seconds of video is the
wrong approach. Allowing some breathing space between sentences and sections
helps transitions flow more smoothly.
Style
Defining
your style is an essential part of an animation. It helps to connect the brand
with the narrative, as well as shape the storyboard, defining what kind of
movements are possible. This stage is where we define the characters’ style,
color palette, typography, composition, etc.
This
visual style directly influences the complexity and the expectations of the
animation. Working side-by-side with the animation strategy, the style can help
to refine some early directions and vice-versa.
For
example:
The
strategy can define an animation piece as being character-based but without a
preference for the animation style — cut out or cel — for those characters.
When the Art Director starts working with the team to design the visuals for
those characters, their directions will set the tone for the animation
style.
On
the other hand, if the strategy sets the animation style to be cut out (based
on budget, timing, or target definition), the style of those characters should
follow a structure that will allow the animation technique to work.
With
the style and script in place, the next step in pre-production becomes clearer
and helps the story align with the intended visual impact.
Storyboard
The
last part of pre-production consists of a storyboard, which is the thread that
guides the illustrators and animators during the animation’s production. This
is where a storyboard artist and the creative director split the script into
multiple sections and draw the animation’s scenes and actions to create the
visual narrative of the story. The style is a great ally of the storyboard
because it dictates the visual tools that the storyboard artist can use. In the
same way that a more abstract style will steer the storyboard to compositions
that include more shapes and metaphors, a character-based style will lead the
storyboard to follow a descriptive approach over abstraction, and so on.
This
moment is where all your work so far comes together to shape what the animation
will be. At this point, you already know your story’s content, visual style,
and storyboard to guide the production by planning each moment of the video’s
actions and composition. Now you are ready to move full speed ahead to
production.
A note about timing
This
is the first stage of every project development cycle, and when it comes to
animation, bringing your team closer early on helps to guarantee good work
throughout. There is a direct correlation between getting your animation
pre-production right from the start and the ultimate output quality of a
project.
You
will get the best results for your clients and partners when you communicate
clearly from day one. In pre-production, an animator’s perspective brings
smarter solutions to problems that would only be noticed later in production by
less experienced stakeholders. It helps to avoid conflicts and sets good
expectations, nurturing better relationships with the agency’s clients as it
prevents delays and unnecessary changes.
The
best moment to start pre-production and bring your animation team is now.
Again, the more you spend on the early stages, the more you save later on.
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