

The most expensive thing I had to buy was the disk which was $102 (which includes shipping). pieces (for the front and back of the bottom structure )Īll of the parts cost me $50 in total. piece (for the bottom part of the back legs that rests on the dowels ) pieces (for the sides of the bottom structure )ģ/4 x 6ft x 6 in plank of.I don't remember what kind of wood it was.but it doesn't really looked similar to the aspen pieces (for the part that you put the dowels in that the back legs rest on )

One thing I wished it had come with when I was out buying stuff was an actual supply list to build that thing. This is the blueprint we used to build it (found at the Hand-Drawn Animation Equipment blog) I had just so happened to bring this gooseneck clip-on lamp with me and we decided to give see how well it would work as a backlight and: The light fixture was really hard to find for cheap. We actually had to completely improvise the legs in the back that lock into the dowels, and it turned out to be the most sturdy part of the whole thing. It was awesome because a lot of the measurements we did were based on guesses and it worked out perfectly!

DIY ANIMATION DESK PORTABLE
Here's the finished desk in it's collapsed portable form. He had both! And.did most of the actual building while I was the one who deciphered the blueprints and dictated the measurements. Of course, with no tools or experience with wood I never thought it's actually happen. So, my friend and I built an animation desk! I got the idea to do it after stumbling upon this blog a couple months ago.
