It took a heckuf a lot more time and know how than I have.
Not sure if they used a similar method, but I had friends who did something like this for a design project in their computer class. They wrote out a grid with one post-it per square. They outlined an animation sequence and input it into the computer shot by shot. The computer organized it into the quickest set up (least amount of effort between shots)… the shots were out of order, but the work was minimized. Then, once all shots were completed, they organized them in the right order. Required minimal man-power and they did over 100 shots in one day.
That said, having an actual person in the shots here makes it less likely they could shoot non-sequentially… but would be interested to see how they set it all up
It took a heckuf a lot more time and know how than I have.
Not sure if they used a similar method, but I had friends who did something like this for a design project in their computer class. They wrote out a grid with one post-it per square. They outlined an animation sequence and input it into the computer shot by shot. The computer organized it into the quickest set up (least amount of effort between shots)… the shots were out of order, but the work was minimized. Then, once all shots were completed, they organized them in the right order. Required minimal man-power and they did over 100 shots in one day.
That said, having an actual person in the shots here makes it less likely they could shoot non-sequentially… but would be interested to see how they set it all up