Rigging

Relevant to Blender v2.31

If we were going for a still picture, our work up to this point would be enough, but we want Gus to move! The next step is to give him a skeleton, or Armature, which will move him. This is called the fine art of rigging. Gus will have a very simple rigging: four limbs (two arms and two legs) and a few joints (no elbows, only knees), but no feet or hands. To add the rigging:

1. Set the cursor where the shoulder will be, press SPACE>>Add>>Armature. A rhomboidal object will appear, a bone of the armature system, stretching from cursor to mouse pointer. Place the other end of the armature in Gus's hand (Figure 49) with LMB. This will fix the bone and create a new one from the end point of the previous one, producing a bone chain. We don't need any other bones right now, so press ESC to exit.

Figure 49. Adding the first bone, an elbowless arm.

2. Stay in EditMode, then move the cursor to where the hip joint will be and add a new bone (SPACE>>ADD>>Armature) down to the knee. Press LMB and a new bone should automatically appear there. Stretch this bone down to the foot (Figure 50).

Figure 50. Adding the second and third bones, a leg bone chain.

TipBone position
 

The bones we are adding will deform Gus's body mesh. To produce a neat result, try to place the bone joints as shown in the illustrations.

3. Now place the cursor in the center and select all bones with AKEY. Duplicate them with SHIFT-D and exit grab mode with ESC then flip them with MKEY relatively to the cursor and Global X axis as you did with meshes (Figure 51).

Figure 51. The complete armature after duplicating and flipping.

Once you've selected all of the bones (AKEY), the Edit Buttons window should show an Armature Bones Panel which should show the Armature buttons (Figure 52).

Figure 52. The Edit Buttons window for an armature.

Press the Draw Names button to see the names of the bones, then SHIFT-LMB on the names in the Edit Button window (Figure 52) to change them to something appropriate like Arm.R, Arm.L, UpLeg.R, LoLeg.R, UpLeg.L, and LoLeg.L. Exit EditMode with (TAB).

TipNaming Bones
 

It is very important to name your bones with a trailing '.L' or '.R' to distinguish between left and right ones, so that the Action editor will be able to automatically flip your poses.