Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - What is celluloid style?

What is celluloid style?

Celluloid style refers to the style in which color shadows are hard-edged. Japanese animation is mainly celluloid and pen drawing, which embodies a beautiful style.

Celluloid coloring generally refers to those coloring methods, from the beginning of the draft to the release of a clean line draft, paved with color blocks, plus shadows and effects. Just like the simplified coloring method used in animation. Celluloid is a kind of plane painting, which can be understood as that the color has only two or three layers of background color-a ghost-which creates a three-dimensional effect through the color on the plane, but also uses a special brush. Celluloid is an extreme of graphic painting, and the color boundaries are basically clear. Basic animation is like this, which is convenient for many people to work together. As long as you mark the color and mark the range with colored lines, you can express it accurately. Thick coating is slowly piling up colors with brushes and techniques, with strong three-dimensional sense, high technical requirements, rich colors and many textures. Generally, you can work without a line draft or only a draft, and you can only do it by one person. If it's a comic book, whether it's black and white or color, it's basically a flat picture. Unless it's a fan's personal book or an illustrated book, you can use various painting methods.