What is the easiest way to create peristalsis (when food moves inside food pipe) like animation in blender?





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I'm new to blender and I have learned some basic animating features. I have taken a video project for a school in which I have to explain the digestive system in a fully animated way.



I have modeled the Digestive system. Now when the food enters mouth and goes through esophagus(food pipe) esophagus creates a pushing wavy movement to push the food to stomach.



Could you suggest some easy ways to animate it?



This picture explains the process of peristalsis.



Peristalsis process]1










share|improve this question
























  • Try playing with Lattices and the Lattice modifier. You basically create a cage off influence and then you can animate the location of the influence. E.g. a "pinch" and "swell" and then animate that moving along the pipe.
    – rob
    Nov 20 at 13:10










  • Related Bulging Garden Hose Animation
    – batFINGER
    Nov 20 at 13:25

















up vote
4
down vote

favorite
3












I'm new to blender and I have learned some basic animating features. I have taken a video project for a school in which I have to explain the digestive system in a fully animated way.



I have modeled the Digestive system. Now when the food enters mouth and goes through esophagus(food pipe) esophagus creates a pushing wavy movement to push the food to stomach.



Could you suggest some easy ways to animate it?



This picture explains the process of peristalsis.



Peristalsis process]1










share|improve this question
























  • Try playing with Lattices and the Lattice modifier. You basically create a cage off influence and then you can animate the location of the influence. E.g. a "pinch" and "swell" and then animate that moving along the pipe.
    – rob
    Nov 20 at 13:10










  • Related Bulging Garden Hose Animation
    – batFINGER
    Nov 20 at 13:25













up vote
4
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
4
down vote

favorite
3






3





I'm new to blender and I have learned some basic animating features. I have taken a video project for a school in which I have to explain the digestive system in a fully animated way.



I have modeled the Digestive system. Now when the food enters mouth and goes through esophagus(food pipe) esophagus creates a pushing wavy movement to push the food to stomach.



Could you suggest some easy ways to animate it?



This picture explains the process of peristalsis.



Peristalsis process]1










share|improve this question















I'm new to blender and I have learned some basic animating features. I have taken a video project for a school in which I have to explain the digestive system in a fully animated way.



I have modeled the Digestive system. Now when the food enters mouth and goes through esophagus(food pipe) esophagus creates a pushing wavy movement to push the food to stomach.



Could you suggest some easy ways to animate it?



This picture explains the process of peristalsis.



Peristalsis process]1







animation






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 20 at 17:28









Duarte Farrajota Ramos

31.9k53675




31.9k53675










asked Nov 20 at 12:44









Aravind S

905




905












  • Try playing with Lattices and the Lattice modifier. You basically create a cage off influence and then you can animate the location of the influence. E.g. a "pinch" and "swell" and then animate that moving along the pipe.
    – rob
    Nov 20 at 13:10










  • Related Bulging Garden Hose Animation
    – batFINGER
    Nov 20 at 13:25


















  • Try playing with Lattices and the Lattice modifier. You basically create a cage off influence and then you can animate the location of the influence. E.g. a "pinch" and "swell" and then animate that moving along the pipe.
    – rob
    Nov 20 at 13:10










  • Related Bulging Garden Hose Animation
    – batFINGER
    Nov 20 at 13:25
















Try playing with Lattices and the Lattice modifier. You basically create a cage off influence and then you can animate the location of the influence. E.g. a "pinch" and "swell" and then animate that moving along the pipe.
– rob
Nov 20 at 13:10




Try playing with Lattices and the Lattice modifier. You basically create a cage off influence and then you can animate the location of the influence. E.g. a "pinch" and "swell" and then animate that moving along the pipe.
– rob
Nov 20 at 13:10












Related Bulging Garden Hose Animation
– batFINGER
Nov 20 at 13:25




Related Bulging Garden Hose Animation
– batFINGER
Nov 20 at 13:25










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
6
down vote



accepted










You could do it with Cast modifier as explained here.



But first I proposed the Lattice method:




  • Create your food and oesophagus objects.

  • Create a lattice with shift A and scale it in Object mode so that it encages a little bit more than your food.

  • Subdivide your Lattice in the Properties panel > Data > Lattice and U, V and W values (subdivide more than I did so that you'll be able to create details like the little pinch contraction).

  • Give your oesophagus a Lattice modifier with the lattice as the Object.

  • Select your lattice and in the Properties panel > Data > Shape keys, create a basis shapekey with the "+" button, then a second one that will be the deformation shapekey.

  • Keep that second shapekey selected, go in Edit mode and play with the lattice vertices so that it deforms the oesophagus the way you want.

  • Come back in Object mode, and play with the Shape Keys Value to deform the oesophagus.

  • Now, select both the lattice and the food object and move them up and down, you can see that the oesophagus deformation follows the lattice, as if the food was deforming it.

  • Create your animation with keyframes in the Dopesheet.


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you so much. It was really helpful. I am going to do the same with small and large intestines.
    – Aravind S
    Nov 20 at 13:27










  • As I said you need to give more subdivisions to the lattice so that you can create the little pinch above the food, it should work
    – moonboots
    Nov 20 at 13:32










  • Also see the followup post where some pitfalls of scaling the lattice can come into play.
    – iKlsR
    Nov 23 at 14:53












  • Yes, that's a different situation, that's why I recommended him to use the Cast modifier ;)
    – moonboots
    Nov 23 at 15:15











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
6
down vote



accepted










You could do it with Cast modifier as explained here.



But first I proposed the Lattice method:




  • Create your food and oesophagus objects.

  • Create a lattice with shift A and scale it in Object mode so that it encages a little bit more than your food.

  • Subdivide your Lattice in the Properties panel > Data > Lattice and U, V and W values (subdivide more than I did so that you'll be able to create details like the little pinch contraction).

  • Give your oesophagus a Lattice modifier with the lattice as the Object.

  • Select your lattice and in the Properties panel > Data > Shape keys, create a basis shapekey with the "+" button, then a second one that will be the deformation shapekey.

  • Keep that second shapekey selected, go in Edit mode and play with the lattice vertices so that it deforms the oesophagus the way you want.

  • Come back in Object mode, and play with the Shape Keys Value to deform the oesophagus.

  • Now, select both the lattice and the food object and move them up and down, you can see that the oesophagus deformation follows the lattice, as if the food was deforming it.

  • Create your animation with keyframes in the Dopesheet.


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you so much. It was really helpful. I am going to do the same with small and large intestines.
    – Aravind S
    Nov 20 at 13:27










  • As I said you need to give more subdivisions to the lattice so that you can create the little pinch above the food, it should work
    – moonboots
    Nov 20 at 13:32










  • Also see the followup post where some pitfalls of scaling the lattice can come into play.
    – iKlsR
    Nov 23 at 14:53












  • Yes, that's a different situation, that's why I recommended him to use the Cast modifier ;)
    – moonboots
    Nov 23 at 15:15















up vote
6
down vote



accepted










You could do it with Cast modifier as explained here.



But first I proposed the Lattice method:




  • Create your food and oesophagus objects.

  • Create a lattice with shift A and scale it in Object mode so that it encages a little bit more than your food.

  • Subdivide your Lattice in the Properties panel > Data > Lattice and U, V and W values (subdivide more than I did so that you'll be able to create details like the little pinch contraction).

  • Give your oesophagus a Lattice modifier with the lattice as the Object.

  • Select your lattice and in the Properties panel > Data > Shape keys, create a basis shapekey with the "+" button, then a second one that will be the deformation shapekey.

  • Keep that second shapekey selected, go in Edit mode and play with the lattice vertices so that it deforms the oesophagus the way you want.

  • Come back in Object mode, and play with the Shape Keys Value to deform the oesophagus.

  • Now, select both the lattice and the food object and move them up and down, you can see that the oesophagus deformation follows the lattice, as if the food was deforming it.

  • Create your animation with keyframes in the Dopesheet.


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























  • Thank you so much. It was really helpful. I am going to do the same with small and large intestines.
    – Aravind S
    Nov 20 at 13:27










  • As I said you need to give more subdivisions to the lattice so that you can create the little pinch above the food, it should work
    – moonboots
    Nov 20 at 13:32










  • Also see the followup post where some pitfalls of scaling the lattice can come into play.
    – iKlsR
    Nov 23 at 14:53












  • Yes, that's a different situation, that's why I recommended him to use the Cast modifier ;)
    – moonboots
    Nov 23 at 15:15













up vote
6
down vote



accepted







up vote
6
down vote



accepted






You could do it with Cast modifier as explained here.



But first I proposed the Lattice method:




  • Create your food and oesophagus objects.

  • Create a lattice with shift A and scale it in Object mode so that it encages a little bit more than your food.

  • Subdivide your Lattice in the Properties panel > Data > Lattice and U, V and W values (subdivide more than I did so that you'll be able to create details like the little pinch contraction).

  • Give your oesophagus a Lattice modifier with the lattice as the Object.

  • Select your lattice and in the Properties panel > Data > Shape keys, create a basis shapekey with the "+" button, then a second one that will be the deformation shapekey.

  • Keep that second shapekey selected, go in Edit mode and play with the lattice vertices so that it deforms the oesophagus the way you want.

  • Come back in Object mode, and play with the Shape Keys Value to deform the oesophagus.

  • Now, select both the lattice and the food object and move them up and down, you can see that the oesophagus deformation follows the lattice, as if the food was deforming it.

  • Create your animation with keyframes in the Dopesheet.


enter image description here






share|improve this answer














You could do it with Cast modifier as explained here.



But first I proposed the Lattice method:




  • Create your food and oesophagus objects.

  • Create a lattice with shift A and scale it in Object mode so that it encages a little bit more than your food.

  • Subdivide your Lattice in the Properties panel > Data > Lattice and U, V and W values (subdivide more than I did so that you'll be able to create details like the little pinch contraction).

  • Give your oesophagus a Lattice modifier with the lattice as the Object.

  • Select your lattice and in the Properties panel > Data > Shape keys, create a basis shapekey with the "+" button, then a second one that will be the deformation shapekey.

  • Keep that second shapekey selected, go in Edit mode and play with the lattice vertices so that it deforms the oesophagus the way you want.

  • Come back in Object mode, and play with the Shape Keys Value to deform the oesophagus.

  • Now, select both the lattice and the food object and move them up and down, you can see that the oesophagus deformation follows the lattice, as if the food was deforming it.

  • Create your animation with keyframes in the Dopesheet.


enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 28 at 14:56

























answered Nov 20 at 13:11









moonboots

7,7372514




7,7372514












  • Thank you so much. It was really helpful. I am going to do the same with small and large intestines.
    – Aravind S
    Nov 20 at 13:27










  • As I said you need to give more subdivisions to the lattice so that you can create the little pinch above the food, it should work
    – moonboots
    Nov 20 at 13:32










  • Also see the followup post where some pitfalls of scaling the lattice can come into play.
    – iKlsR
    Nov 23 at 14:53












  • Yes, that's a different situation, that's why I recommended him to use the Cast modifier ;)
    – moonboots
    Nov 23 at 15:15


















  • Thank you so much. It was really helpful. I am going to do the same with small and large intestines.
    – Aravind S
    Nov 20 at 13:27










  • As I said you need to give more subdivisions to the lattice so that you can create the little pinch above the food, it should work
    – moonboots
    Nov 20 at 13:32










  • Also see the followup post where some pitfalls of scaling the lattice can come into play.
    – iKlsR
    Nov 23 at 14:53












  • Yes, that's a different situation, that's why I recommended him to use the Cast modifier ;)
    – moonboots
    Nov 23 at 15:15
















Thank you so much. It was really helpful. I am going to do the same with small and large intestines.
– Aravind S
Nov 20 at 13:27




Thank you so much. It was really helpful. I am going to do the same with small and large intestines.
– Aravind S
Nov 20 at 13:27












As I said you need to give more subdivisions to the lattice so that you can create the little pinch above the food, it should work
– moonboots
Nov 20 at 13:32




As I said you need to give more subdivisions to the lattice so that you can create the little pinch above the food, it should work
– moonboots
Nov 20 at 13:32












Also see the followup post where some pitfalls of scaling the lattice can come into play.
– iKlsR
Nov 23 at 14:53






Also see the followup post where some pitfalls of scaling the lattice can come into play.
– iKlsR
Nov 23 at 14:53














Yes, that's a different situation, that's why I recommended him to use the Cast modifier ;)
– moonboots
Nov 23 at 15:15




Yes, that's a different situation, that's why I recommended him to use the Cast modifier ;)
– moonboots
Nov 23 at 15:15


















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