Meta: motion tweening

Motion tweening is a process in animation that creates inbetween frames without having to manually generate new frames. A common form of tweening is puppet animation, which involves cutting a character into parts, rigging them together, and then moving them one at a time. As such, the tweening process is not fully automatic most of the time, instead, it's careful manipulation of an existing image (or group of images) to add the illusion of movement.

Tweening may be done in a dedicated animation software, such as Adobe Animate/Flash, or it can be done in an editing software like After Effects.

This tag is not mutually exclusive with frame by frame, the two often go hand-in-hand and both will be used in the same animation. However, you shouldn't tag both if one is just being used for minor elements.

Example of fully tweened animation

post #164847

Examples of mixing tweening and frame-by-frame (currently missing)

post #0

See also

The following tags are aliased to this tag: tweening_animation (learn more).

This tag implicates 2d_animation (learn more).

Posts (view all)

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    post #164847
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