01-05-2013, 06:05 PM
(This post was last modified: 01-05-2013, 06:07 PM by Ridge Troopa.)
For consistency's sake, you may as well use the style I came up with on Bowser's for Mario's sheets. You can probably tell that everything still fits in tiles, even the text boxes, so that it loads perfectly into an animation programs as a filmstrip.
I put parts of the same animations on the same line if possible to use less space and reduce filesize. Cropping animations so the width of the sheet is better left for later, though, as you'll never know what dimensions are best unless you have all the animations on one image first.
Ultimately it doesn't matter that much if you separate parts of animations on different rows, but if you move them to the same row do as I did - indicate where a loop or quirk starts, how many loops it plays, etc.
I put parts of the same animations on the same line if possible to use less space and reduce filesize. Cropping animations so the width of the sheet is better left for later, though, as you'll never know what dimensions are best unless you have all the animations on one image first.
Ultimately it doesn't matter that much if you separate parts of animations on different rows, but if you move them to the same row do as I did - indicate where a loop or quirk starts, how many loops it plays, etc.