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history of animation

  • the father of animation

    the father of animation
    Blackton--Father of American Animation. American animation owes its beginnings to J. Stuart Blackton, a British filmmaker who created the first animated film in America. Before creating cartoons, Blackton was a vaudeville performer known as "The Komikal Kartoonist."
  • the inventor of cel animation

    the inventor of cel animation
    the inventor of cel animator Is an American animator by the name of earl Hurd, who worked on movies such as Snow White,elmer elephant and the debut of Thomas cat
  • the first form of animation

    the first form of animation
    Historically and technically, the first animated film (in other words, the earliest animated film ever printed on standard motion-picture film) was Humorous Phases of Funny Faces (1906), also made by J. Stuart Blackton. It was the earliest surviving example of a drawn animated film.
  • the first animation

    the first animation
    the first animation is the 1908 French film fantasmagorie by Émile Cohl. It is one of the earliest examples of traditional (hand drawn) animation, and considered by film historians to be the first animated cartoon
  • the creators of the 12 basic principles of animation

    the creators of the 12 basic principles of animation
    the 12 principles of animation were developed by the old men of Walt Disney studios amongst them frank Thomas and ollie johnston , during the 1930s
  • 12 princess of animation

    12 princess of animation
    1.squash and stretch
    2.anticipation
    3.staging
    4.Straight ahead action and pose to pose
    5.Follow through and overlapping action
    6.Slow in and slow out
    7.Arc
    8. Secondary action
    9.timing
    10.exaggeration
    11.solid drawing
    12.appeal
  • the first computer animator

    the first computer animator
    1970s. This is an experimental 2D animated short drawn on a data tablet by Peter Foldes, who used the world's first key frame animation software, invented by Nestor Burtnyk and Marceli Wein. Produced by Ed Catmull, the short demonstrates a computer animated hand, as well as human faces.