A form of animation similar to stop-motion<span>, but which incorporates </span>motion<span> blur. Ordinary </span>stop motion<span> cannot produce </span>motion<span> blur as </span>motion<span> only occurs </span>between <span>frames. ... This effect is most noticeable when frames are repeated or deleted in order to obtain </span>slow motion<span> or fast </span>motion<span>.
Hope that helped :)</span>
Answer:
3
Explanation:
This would’ve made more since if they put a ratio. You are playing 4 notes, starting on the and of 3 and ending with the downbeat of the next bar. That’s 4 8th notes in the space of 3 8th notes, commonly referred to as 4:3. In this case, the writer wrote the notes as 16ths instead of 8ths, but they fill the same space. Technically speaking, this is 4:6, or 4 16th notes in the space of 6 16th notes. Every tuplet has a ratio, whether the writer expressly puts that ratio or not. Common examples include Triplets = 3:2, 3 8th notes in the space of 2 8th notes Fivelets = 5:4, 5 notes in the space of 4, or 5:3, 5 notes in the space of 3. There are many others, but each time you see a tuplet, figure out how much space it takes up in the bar, figure out what the ratio should be, and remember to think of it as X notes in the space of Y notes.