Difference between revisions of "Animating a static, commercial snowman"

From diychristmas.org wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
::So you picked up a wire frame snowman at your local home improvement center and now that you've plugged it in, it glows nice and bright but it just stands there. And you want to make it interact a bit more with your viewers by adding some motion. It's not as hard as you might think, but it does involve a bit of DIY engineering, and often it turns out to be the ''one-of-a-kind-I-hope-I-never-have-to-do-this-again'' kind of engineering.
+
::So you picked up a wire frame snowman at your local home improvement center and now that you've plugged it in, it glows nice and bright but it just stands there. And you want to make it interact a bit more with your viewers by adding some motion. It's not as hard as you might think, but it does involve a bit of DIY engineering, and truth be told, sometimes it turns out to be the ''one-of-a-kind-I-hope-I-never-have-to-do-this-again'' kind of engineering! But stick to it, and it'll come together. Here's one way to do it...
  
 
[[File:Snowman.JPG | 250px |center]]
 
[[File:Snowman.JPG | 250px |center]]

Revision as of 05:59, 29 April 2020

So you picked up a wire frame snowman at your local home improvement center and now that you've plugged it in, it glows nice and bright but it just stands there. And you want to make it interact a bit more with your viewers by adding some motion. It's not as hard as you might think, but it does involve a bit of DIY engineering, and truth be told, sometimes it turns out to be the one-of-a-kind-I-hope-I-never-have-to-do-this-again kind of engineering! But stick to it, and it'll come together. Here's one way to do it...
Snowman.JPG