Photograph shows a printed document placed on a desk surface above a computer keyboard. The document is titled “Bread Will Walk Animation Pipeline/Workflow ” and contains a structured flowchart diagram divided into multiple horizontal sections. The diagram consists of colored boxes connected by directional arrows, representing sequential steps in an animation production pipeline.Boxes are color-coded: some in orange or tan appear to indicate tasks or stages, green boxes likely represent notes, metadata, or supporting processes, and blue sections appear to designate transitions or specialized technical tasks. Each section of the flowchart depicts a small stick-figure icon, possibly representing the role of a participant or operator within each workflow segment.
The structure is divided into multiple columns and rows, with each row describing a discrete phase. Arrows flow vertically and horizontally, connecting preparatory steps to subsequent animation or compositing tasks. The left column shows early-stage processes including pre-production planning, asset preparation, and input organization. Middle columns detail animation execution, referencing compositional layering, timing adjustments, and integration of digital and hand-drawn elements. Right column sections describe output handling, including rendering, file conversion, and archival storage.
Handwritten annotations are visible at the bottom of the sheet, including a note reading “1 vibe – no assembly only mix.” These markings indicate additional directions or reflections layered onto the printed pipeline design. Part of a clay or sculpted figure, positioned at the bottom right of the photograph, partially obscures the document. To the left margin of the paper, pencil sketches are faintly visible, suggesting concurrent ideation or visual development work.
The overall document functions as a project management and technical reference sheet for coordinating the hybrid animation workflow of Bread Will Walk, capturing sequential logic, role assignments, and interdependencies between creative and technical stages.
