Overview

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Animation is the rapid display of a sequence of images ("frames") to create the illusion of movement. Convincing movement requires many such frames, but 2D animation is traditionally created by drawing each frame individually, a method called "frame-by-frame animation".

Digital animation makes it easier for artists to animate more quickly, efficiently, and consistently. It introduced concepts such as automatic in-betweening ("tweening") of frames and reuse of small animations. Synfig Studio is free, open source, 2D animation software that implements those concepts.

Layers are Different

Every shape is a layer

The Layer in Synfig differs from those in most 2D graphics editors. Every object, be it a rectangle, circle, bezier outline or region is a layer on its own. Two kinds of layers exist in Synfig, the primitives layers and the filters (or effects) layers. All the Layers are stored in "canvases".

The Power of ValueNodes

Synfig's ValueNode system gives us flexible control over repeated data and complex relationships. All layer properties are stored as reusable ValueNodes, which can be linked to each other or even derived from mathematic formulae. An important aspect of ValueNodes is that they can be animated and tweened; in fact, the vertices of a shape are ValueNodes, and animating them morphs the shape.

A real-world example of ValueNodes' usefulness is clothing. If a character's clothing must be colored alike in multiple shots, each instance's color can be linked across files. Whenever one instance's color is changed, they are all changed simultaneously.

Aside from linking simple pieces of data, you can also define relations between them using a functions and conditions. We have the ability to create automatic animation based on defined laws and brings the whole animation process to a new level. A ball from a cannon can be realistically fired, or a pseudo-3D character's face can rotate accurately with its head.

Example Animation Types

Morphing

Morphing takes two images and creates a smooth transition between them. This is done by tweening the vertices of one shape to the vertices of another. Intricate nimation with this method is done simply by supplying frames in key positions (keyframes) at relatively wide time intervals, and allowing Synfig to fill in the gaps with tweening.

Cutout animation

The Adventures of Boris Munchausen demonstrates cutout animation

Cutout animation is created by splitting objects into parts and applying some simple transformations to them (like translation, rotation or scale). Synfig Studio will tween movements easily.

It is worth noting that cutout animation can be produced from both bitmap images and vector shapes. The transformation of parts will be the same, either way.

Simple or Complex?

What if we don't need all these special features? Not everybody wants to make complicated animations, and sometimes we don't want to worry about intricacies in animating. Although the interface can take some familiarizing, you aren't forced to connect ValueNodes or "program" your shapes to do math. Animating with Synfig Studio can be done without extensive use of ValueNodes links, and in many cases you would not need them anyway!

Synfig Studio is not directly intended to draw animation frame-by-frame, it can be used to bring your frame-by-frame animation to film-quality level. Artists can trace each frame's bitmap data into vector format, after which fun and fascinating effects can be applied during the creation process to achieve a professional animation look.

Synfig Studio's features are covered in detail within this manual.

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