Glossary

  • Images or movies that actually output two different images, each from the point of view of one of the human eyes. When viewed or projected through special devices, such as a 3D display or virtual reality goggles, this creates the illusion that the elements in the image are actually in front of the viewer.
  • An image channel that carries transparency information. An image already has three channels: red, green and blue (RGB). The alpha channel is the fourth channel (A). The matte, or the transparency information, is stored in this fourth channel. An image without an alpha channel is always opaque.
  • A movie made by sequencing the panels in a storyboard, and timing each panel for the rough duration of the action they represent, and in sync with the soundtrack. Animatics are used to convert the storyboard into a very rough draft of the final movie, to determine the time alloted to each scene and each action and to synchronize the action with the sound track.
  • The simulation of movement created by drawing or editing individual frames.
  • Japanese animation.
  • Action rarely occurs in a straight-forward manner; rather it typically unfolds in what storytellers refer to as an arc. The purpose of a story arc is to move a character or situation from one state or scenario to the next.
  • The ratio between the width and height dimensions for any scene, frame or film format. Currently, the most popular aspect ration is 16:9. Legacy displays would use an aspect ratio of 4:3.
  • An automated method of feeding drawings into a scanner in which multiple drawings are stacked into a sheet feeder. When the scanner is activated, the drawings are scanned consecutively, without further user intervention.
  • Automatically mapping drawings in an element to the mouth chart generated for a sound. This can save time when lip-syncing a voice track.
  • An imaginary line around which an object rotates. For 2D graphics, there are two axes: X (horizontal and Y (vertical). For 3D graphics, there are three axes: X (horizontal, Y (vertical) and Z (depth). In animations that constantly rotate, the axis element specifies what axis the object rotates around. A negative number causes an animation to rotate counter clockwise whereas a positive number causes an animation to rotate clockwise.
  • The artwork that fills the camera field and which is behind the characters and props. Typically, this artwork represents the decor or stage in which the action occurs.
  • A method of defining curved lines invented by French mathematician Pierre Bézier. A Bézier curve is a mathematical or parametric curve. Bézier curves are defined by control points. In Harmony, Bézier curves have a starting point, an ending point and two inner control points that influence the curve between the starting and ending points.
  • An image defined by a mesh of pixels, as well as the individual colour of each one of its pixels. Bitmap graphics are known for being preferable to vector graphics for highly detailed or photorealistic artwork. However, bitmap graphics cannot be scaled, rotate or skewed without losing picture quality.
  • In cut-out animation, breakdown is the action of breaking a character into pieces to create a puppet with articulations. To break down a character, the artist cuts parts, such as the hands and arms, from the character's model and pastes them in separate layers. Next, the joints are fixed and the pivots set. In traditional animation, a breakdown is an animation pose generally found between two key poses. The key poses are the main poses in an animation and the breakdowns are secondary poses, ones that help describe the motion and the rotation curve (usually referred to as an arc).
  • Camera shake occurs in a scene when the camera moves slightly and quickly in several directions. This gives the impression of an impact, vibration or, for example, bumps on the road.
  • A text field containing dialogue, effects, sound or slugging information in a storyboard.
  • In traditional animation, a cel (also known as celluloid) is a transparent sheet on which the animation is inked and painted before being sent to the camera. The picture's outline is drawn on the front of the cel and then coloured along the back.
  • Each character in an animated film is drawn from multiple angles in poster-style format, called a model sheet, which serves as a reference for the animators.
  • In optics, chromatic aberration (CA), achromatism or chromatic distortion, is a type of distortion in which there is a failure of a lens to focus all colours to the same convergence point.
  • After rough drawings have been tested and approved, all the noise in the image (excess lines, notes, etc.) is removed to create final drawings which can be inked, painted and shot. The clean up process refers to either tracing a clean line over a rough drawing to achieve the final version or removing dirt and extra lines left by the scanning process.
  • Acronym for Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black. These colours are the standard model used in a process called offset printing.
  • A colour card is a card containing one solid colour that is the same size as the camera. The colour card fills the background with a solid colour when there is no background image included.
  • The official colour design that must be used to paint the animation. A model is the definitive character, prop or location design that each artist must follow for the production.
  • A display of the colour spectrum in the form of a circle.
  • Compositing is the action of incorporating all of a scene's elements to create the final result prior to rendering. For example, the compositing artist will import all the animation sequences, background, overlays and underlays in the scene and position them correctly. The artist will then set the camera frame and animate it, if needed. Finally, the animator will create all the computer-generated effects for the project.
  • When one scene transitions to the ensuing scene by fading out at the same time as the ensuing scene fades in.
  • When one scene transitions to the ensuing scene from one frame to the next, without any visual effect.
  • The process known as cut-out animation is the action of animating characters made out of several pieces by moving them around frame by frame. Cut-out animation can either be computer generated or done traditionally using paper.
  • A series of animation frames that can be repeated to simulate a continuous movement. For example, a character is often made to walk by animating them taking two steps forward, one with each foot, then cycling this animation.
  • The text spoken by a character in a movie or animation.
  • Used by animators, directors and other members of a crew to track the sequence and timing of images, dialogue, sound effects, sound tracks and camera moves. Also known as an exposure sheet.
  • To assign a particular drawing to a range of frames.
  • In the key frames and passing positions in a double bounce walk, the body is lower than a reference line drawn in the upright position. During the in-betweens, the body is above this line giving the appearance of a bounce.
  • Dots per inch is the standard measure of resolution for computerized printers. It is sometimes applied to screens, in which case it should more accurately be referred to as pixels per inch. Either way, the dot is the smallest discrete element making up the image.
  • An operation which consists of clicking and holding the item, then moving it around by moving the mouse cursor. This can be done with the left mouse button or with the pen tip.
  • In animation, the ease, also known as velocity, is the acceleration and deceleration of a motion. It can be a motion created by a function curve, or a series of animated drawings. Other common terms for ease-in and ease-out are slow-in and slow-out.
  • Gradual acceleration in the action. Also known as slow-in.
  • Gradual deceleration in the action. Also known as slow-out.
  • A scene in which the viewer can see the whole area in which a sequence is happening. For example, if a child is playing on the ground in front of his house, the establishing shot would be a scene where the viewer can see the house, the ground, a part of the street and the buildings around the central point of action. This helps the viewer understand the story location and scene orientation.
  • In animation, an exposure is the number of cels on which a drawing appears in the scene. For a drawing to appear longer, the exposure must be extended over a greater number of cels.
  • A sheet with several vertical columns and horizontal frames used to indicate a scene's timing. Each column represents a scene layer. The drawing numbers in each column are indicated and repeated over the particular amount of frames they need to appear. The exposure sheet is used by animators, directors and other members of a crew to track the sequence and timing of images, dialogue, sound effects, sound tracks and camera moves. Also known as a dope sheet.
  • Fade in or fade out is a transition effect used to open or close a sequence. A fade in occurs when the first scene appears progressively, from complete transparency to its complete opacity. A fade out occurs when the last scene progressively disappears, going from complete opacity to complete transparency.
  • Dramatic acceleration at the start of the action.
  • Dramatic acceleration at the end of the action.
  • A measurement unit used in traditional animation to record and track the position of the camera as well as its proximity to the stage.
  • A guide containing all the field units that animation and layout artists use to define the size of the camera field as well as the camera movements.
  • A resolution that is ideal for the widescreen film format that conforms to the standard 4:3 pixel aspect ratio.
  • A resolution that is ideal for the widescreen film format that conforms to the 16:9 pixel aspect ratio.
  • In traditional animation, flipping is the action of going through the drawings of an animation sequence very quickly in order to see the animation in motion. Flipping can also be the action of creating a mirror transformation of an object.
  • The secondary motion caused by the main action. For example, a character wearing a cloak is running. The main action is the body running. This will cause the cloak to follow the motion, although it will not move at the same time, but react a few frames later and follow the main motion curve.
  • Forward kinematics is a feature used to animate principally 3D characters and cut-out puppets with hierarchy. It is used to animate a puppet from one of parent parts, such as a shoulder, and make the rest of the arm move with it as a single piece.
  • An animation frame is a single photographic image in a movie. In traditional animation, the North American standard generally contains 24 frames per second, while in Europe the standard is 25 frames per second.
  • The frame rate is the speed at which the frames are played. They are generally calculated by frame per second. For example, a scene could be played back at 12, 24, 25, 30 or 60 frames per second or any other number. This is the measurement of the frequency (rate) at which an imaging device produces unique consecutive images, called frames. The term applies equally to computer graphics, video cameras, film cameras, and motion capture systems. Frame rate is most often expressed in frames per second (fps) and in progressive-scan monitors as hertz (Hz).
  • A computer-generated motion, trajectory or path on which elements, other trajectories and effects parameters can be attached. The function can be controlled by adding keyframes and control points on the function curve.
  • The range of colours that a particular device can represent.
  • The acronym for High Definition Television, which is the current resolution standard for television productions. The resolution of HDTV productions is either 1280×720 (HD ready) or1920×1080 (full HD) and their frame rate generally range from 23.976 to 30.
  • A frame in the animation in which the character maintains its position without moving. A hold can be created between any two keyframes.
  • Hue, Saturation and Value. A method of defining colours in terms of hue (tint), saturation (shade) and value (tone or luminance).
  • The drawings that exist between the key poses. These are drawn to create fluid transitions between poses.
  • The ink and paint process is the action of painting the empty zones and colouring the lines on the final animation drawings, while following a colour model.
  • The computer-generated motion created between two keyframes. You have the choice to create interpolation, or not, between your keyframes.
  • A feature used mainly to animate 3D characters and cut-out puppets with hierarchy. Inverse kinematics will animate a puppet from one of the extremities, such as a hand, and make the rest of the body follow naturally.
  • A jerky cut between two scenes. Typically, a jump cut is not visually pleasing. It is generally caused by one scene ending, and a second one starting, with a similar image. The lack of difference causes the eye to see a little jump between the two scenes.
  • Important positions in the action defining the starting and ending points of any smooth transition. Keys, or key poses, are the main drawings in an animation sequence describing the motion. For example, if an arm is waving, the keys will be of the arm at one extremity of the wave motion and the other extremity. By flipping those drawings, the animator can see the skeleton of the motion without having all the drawings.
  • A keyboard key, or a combination of keyboard keys, that is assigned to perform a specific command in the application when pressed.
  • Important positions in the action defining the starting and ending points of any action. A keyframe is a computer-generated position at a specific moment (frame) on a given trajectory.
  • In animation, a layer is an individual column, level or character. A scene's layers are superimposed to form the final image.
  • The communication step between the storyboard and the animation. It is the action of putting the storyboard on model. That is, drawing the character by following the design in the model pack, so the animator can start working. The layout artist draws the background, creates the camera and field guide matching the scene and camera motion. Lastly, the animator draws on model the main action poses.
  • The action of putting on model (at the right scale) the storyboard for the animator to start working.
  • The artist who draws the background, and creates the camera and field guide to match the scene and camera motion. They will draw on model the main action poses.
  • Drawing of the main features of the scene used as reference when planning the animation and executing the initial stages of it.
  • The communication step between the storyboard and the animation.
  • A storage area containing templates and assets that can be reused in any project or scene.
  • A device that allows you to see other layers in transparency while you are working on a particular layer.
  • The main centreline in an action pose. When drawing action poses, minding the line of action ensures the pose is dynamic and that its silhouette fits the direction of the action.
  • The process of synchronizing a character's mouth to sounds in the dialogue sound track. The mouth is adjusted frame-by-frame to match the sound of the dialogue and provide the illusion that the character is speaking. Lip-sync can be used for any sound sequence, not only speech, you could for instance have a bird chirping or a wolf howling at the moon.
  • A format that is ideal for videos destined for the web, where size and fast download of a video file take precedence over quality. A low-resolution image is one that lacks fine detail.
  • The manual swapping of mouth position drawings to match a voice track. For this process, both sound scrubbing (listening to a sound wave broken up frame-by-frame) and drawing substitutions are used.
  • A group of colours attributed to a character or prop. The palette is used throughout the entire production to maintain consistency in the look and to ensure that the same colours are used throughout the production. Also known as palette.
  • The definitive character, prop or location design each artist must follow for a production. A colour model is the official colour design that must be used to paint the animation.
  • A feature for creating computer-generated drawings between a source drawing and a destination drawing. Animation created with the morphing feature can be reused in different projects.
  • A keyframe with computer-generated interpolation.
  • A chart based on the eight animation phonemes (A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and X, which is used to represent silence) used for lip-sync.
  • The effect of passing through multiple levels of drawings to create a sense of depth in a shot. A multiplane is a scene in which the layers are placed at different distances from the camera so that when the camera moves, a depth illusion occurs. With a multiplane, all the perspective and scale is calculated automatically.
  • The legacy standard analogue television broadcasting system used in North America.
  • A small push (left, right, up, down, forward or backward) done with the keyboard arrow keys on a selected element. Nudging is used to move a selection very slightly and precisely.
  • A feature that lets you see the previous and next drawings of a sequence.
  • A part of the scene environment, such as a chair or a bush, that is placed in front of the main animation.
  • A resolution that works best with the European format for television and computer screens, as the rectangular pixels are displayed at a different orientation.
  • A palette style is a second version of an existing palette with a slight change in the tint and value. A palette style can be used to create the night version of a palette. It may also be called a clone palette.
  • A palette or master palette is a group of colours attributed to a character or a prop. The palette is used throughout the entire project to maintain a consistency in the look and avoid the colour changing during the animation. Also referred to as a master palette.
  • To move the camera across the scene in any direction.
  • In a storyboard, a panel is a frame in a shot. A shot can be composed of one or several panels.
  • The paperless animation process is the action of animating digitally. The main paperless animation process is to draw, frame by frame, the animation directly in the software.
  • When drawing a walk sequence for a character, the passing position is the point at which one leg passes the other.
  • The path that the action follows.
  • In traditional animation, a tool used to ensure accurate registration of action as cel layers move. In digital animation, in which you are doing a more advanced puppet rigging, you can use peg layers. Peg layers are trajectory layers that do not contain drawings. They are motion paths that you can use to add path articulations. For the latter, you can also use an inverse kinematics tool.
  • A unit of sound in a language.
  • The point around which a peg or drawing rotates.
  • The smallest element of an image displayed on a monitor or TV screen. Pixel, short for picture element, is a single point in a graphic image. It is a small sample of an image, a dot, a square, or a very small section made out of smooth filtering. If you zoom in close enough on a digital image, you will see the pixels, which look like small squares of different colours and intensity.
  • The pose-to-pose animation process is the action of creating all the main action poses, called key poses, and then placing the secondary poses between the keys. The secondary poses are called breakdown. Finally, the animator fills the gaps with the in-between drawings to achieve a smooth animation.
  • The final step when animating by computer. During rendering, the computer takes each pixel that appears on screen and processes all of the components, as well as adding motion blur before it produces a final image. The process of calculating the final images after the compositing process.
  • The size of a scene, generally calculated in pixels. For example, the NTSC resolution is 720 x 480. The resolution should match the final output: HDTV, film-1.33, film-1.66, NTSC, PAL, low.
  • Red, Green, Blue. A method of defining colour by specifying amounts of these three colour components.
  • The process of attaching the various parts of a cut-out puppet.
  • Equivalent to the animation disk/table, a device that allows you to rotate the workspace for greater comfort while drawing.
  • An animation technique in which animators trace over live-action film movement, frame by frame, for use in animated films. The act of sketching over live-action footage to create an animated sequence.
  • Rough is a common name in an animation movie for a drawing that is used as a reference but which does not form part of the final image. A layout is a rough. The skeleton sketch of an animation or design. Roughs mainly consist of sketch lines and shapes, but can also contain design details.
  • The zone at the center of a scene's frame that is safe from being cropped by the TV frame. As a TV frame cuts a margin off the original frame size, maintaining a safe area ensures that the scene's main action will remain clearly visible once the film is screened on television.
  • A shot in a movie or show. A sequence is composed of several scenes. A scene changes to another scene by a simple cut or transition.
  • The original text containing all the movie or show information. In animation, the script contains all of the location descriptions, dialogue, time and more. A project starts with a script.
  • A series of scenes or shots forming a distinct part of the story or movie, usually connected by unity of location or time.
  • A scene in a movie or show. A sequence is composed of several shots. A shot changes to another shot by a simple cut or transition.
  • The gradual acceleration in the action. Also known as ease-in.
  • The gradual deceleration in the action. Also known as ease-out.
  • To indicate the start and stop times of dialogue and relevant actions.
  • A process that lets you hear sound in real time while you move the playhead forward or backward. This is very useful for finely-tuning a lip-sync.
  • A keyframe with no computer-generated interpolation.
  • A visual plan of all the scenes and shots in an animation. The storyboard indicates what will happen, when it will happen and how the objects in a scene are laid out.
  • A technique in which an entire sequence is drawn from the first position to the last, in order. There is very little planning in this methodology. Where the character ends up and how it gets there can be a surprise for both the audience and the animator. While this approach is spontaneous and creative, it can create inaccurate results.
  • When not referring to actual brush or pencil strokes, strokes are invisible outlines that are used to define colour zones, or to close open colour zones.
  • A symbol combines animation, artwork or layers into a single object that you can control in one layer. You can also create symbols out of each body part in your cut-out puppets. You can place whatever you want in a symbol. You can use symbols to animate a puppet or create reusable animations such as blinking.
  • A device used in conjunction with, or instead of, a mouse to move a mouse pointer (sometimes referred to as the cursor) around the computer screen.
  • An asset stored in the library that can be reused in any project. A template can be a drawing, a series of keyframes, a sound file, a panel, a cut-out character, an effect, a trajectory, an animation, or anything else used in the animation.
  • A very small image used as a reference or indicator.
  • The timing information printed on a movie clip to indicate the scene, hour, minute and second that is currently displayed on the screen.
  • A horizontal representation of a scene's elements, timing and keyframes.
  • After the rough animations have gone through cleanup and a final line or pencil test, each drawing is traced and painted for the final animation. In today's digital world, this may be done in a variety ways other than the traditional celluloid or acetate methods.
  • The break down of an animated film's soundtrack into individual sounds to produce the precise frame-by-frame position of each sound.
  • A type of animation process whereby all the animation sequences are drawn by hand on paper before scanning or inking them on cels.
  • A computer-generated path or trajectory that elements can follow. The trajectory can be controlled by control points, keyframes and velocity.
  • An effect placed between two scenes as they pass from one to the other. Common transition effects are cross-dissolve and wipe.
  • In animation, an underlay is a specific part of the decor placed behind the main animation.
  • A vector-based image is composed of points and Bézier curves. The computer reads the points and traces the segments, linking them to reproduce the image shape. There is no fixed size or resolution in a vector image. The graphic can be enlarged and distorted as much as desired and the system will simply recalculate the segments and rebuild the shapes. Vector images are translated and displayed in pixels once the calculation is done.
  • In animation, the velocity, also known as ease, is the acceleration or deceleration of a motion. This can be achieved by a function curve, or via a series of animated drawings. Other common terms for ease-in and ease-out are slow-in and slow-out.
  • A series of drawings "on the spot" that describe the walk for a character. The illusion of movement is created by the use of background pans. To avoid making innumerable drawings, animators routinely make a walk cycle for a character.
  • An area which can be painted with colour.