Model Animation in Studio

Inventor Studio uses assembly constraints and parameters as animation input enabling you to animate the same mechanistic movement you are designing into your product. You can also suppress constraints and animate components in an unconstrained condition. Constraint selection commands, such as Select Top and Select All, help in selecting multiple constraints after which, with one context menu selection, you can suppress the selection set or add it to Animation Favorites.

When you animate a component, camera, or light the result is an action placed in the animation timeline. Animation actions are easily modified either directly or through the same dialog box used to create them. You can drag the action along the timeline, edit the start or end time positions, and mirror the action for an easy reversal of the action. You can rename the Studio nodes in the Scene or Animation browser. Renaming in one browser affects both.

When you animate a part, camera, or light the result is an action placed in the animation timeline. Animation actions are easily modified either directly or through the same dialog box used to create them. You can drag the action along the timeline, edit the start or end time positions, and mirror the action for an easy reversal of the action. You can rename the Studio nodes in the Scene or Animation browser. Renaming in one browser affects both.

Video Producer, part of Inventor Studio, enables the use of multiple camera footage, called shots, still shots, and shot transitions to produce a more cinematic animation.

Composition of animation

Composing an animation can be as simple as creating a turntable camera or as complex as a fly-by camera following a path while your product goes through its paces and interacts with other objects. You determine the level of complexity. As always, keeping it simple makes it easier and faster to produce.

When composing an animation consider the following:

If you have not created a storyboard before, here are a few steps toward making a simple one. These steps can be done digitally (various software products are available for such purposes) or by hand.

  1. Decide if props are used. If yes, we recommend that you create a wrapper assembly and add the content you want in that assembly.
  2. Decide if props are used.
  3. Create and position your cameras, render test images for each camera angle.
  4. Write down the corresponding animation action, whether component, camera, or lighting, that is to take place with the camera angle images.
  5. Write down the corresponding animation action, whether model, camera, or lighting, that is to take place with the camera angle images.
Note: Spending a little time making a storyboard has a few benefits: helps you keep the end goal in focus; provides a point of reference as you move along in the process; produces a sample that can be reviewed and refined.

Production of video footage

Use Inventor Studio to use one or more cameras to create composited animations. Video Producer has commands to combine the footage from one or more cameras, from any of the animations in the open document, into video footage. Additionally, there are shot transitions, such as fade and gradient wipe, that enable a more cinematic look for your animation.

Using Video Producer you can:

When you activate the Video Producer command, the software takes snapshots of all existing cameras and places them in the Shot browser in the dialog box. The number of shots captured depends on the number of cameras you defined for your images and animations, and how many animated sequences each camera captured. For example, a camera animated as a turntable camera has one snapshot to represent the animation. A camera animated three times in an animation has three shots in the browser, one for each animated sequence.

Use transitions to blend two shots with an effect between them. You can create and maintain multiple productions inside your assembly.

Use transitions to blend two shots with an effect between them. You can create and maintain multiple productions inside your part.

Rendering of animations

Inventor Studio provides commands for rendering during the animation design process or for final output.

If, during animation design, you are curious what your animation looks like, but not concerned with the final rendered appearance, you can do a preview render. Preview renders use the standard Inventor graphic system for producing the animation output. You can quickly render the animation to see component motion and camera animation without waiting the lengthy time that is required for a realistic rendered result.

If, during animation design, you are curious what your animation looks like, but not concerned with the final rendered appearance, you can do a preview render. Preview renders use the standard Inventor graphic system for producing the animation output. You can quickly render the animation to see part motion and camera animation without waiting the lengthy time that is required for a realistic rendered result.

Once the animation meets your requirements, render it with full lighting and reflection using the Shaded render type or you can use the Illustration type to produce a more cartoon looking rendering. Also, if you used Video Producer to composite various camera shots and transitions into video footage, render its output.

When you use the render animation command you can: