Claude Code Plugins

Community-maintained marketplace

Feedback

Use when the animation domain is unclear or spans multiple contexts—provides general-purpose Disney animation principle guidance.

Install Skill

1Download skill
2Enable skills in Claude

Open claude.ai/settings/capabilities and find the "Skills" section

3Upload to Claude

Click "Upload skill" and select the downloaded ZIP file

Note: Please verify skill by going through its instructions before using it.

SKILL.md

name universal-fallback
description Use when the animation domain is unclear or spans multiple contexts—provides general-purpose Disney animation principle guidance.

Universal Animation Principles

Disney's 12 animation principles applied generically across any medium or context.

Quick Reference

Principle Universal Application
Squash & Stretch Show impact and flexibility
Anticipation Prepare before action
Staging Direct attention clearly
Straight Ahead / Pose to Pose Continuous vs keyframe approach
Follow Through / Overlapping Elements complete at different rates
Slow In / Slow Out Ease acceleration/deceleration
Arc Natural curved motion paths
Secondary Action Supporting elements reinforce primary
Timing Duration affects perceived weight
Exaggeration Push for clarity and impact
Solid Drawing Maintain form and structure
Appeal Design for engagement and delight

The 12 Principles Explained

1. Squash & Stretch

Objects deform during action to show impact, weight, and flexibility. Volume remains constant—compression in one axis means expansion in another. The most important principle for showing life and physics.

Application: Anything with mass reacts to force. Soft objects deform more. Rigid objects show less but still respond. Use to show weight, speed, and material properties.

2. Anticipation

Preparation before the main action. Wind-up before pitch. Crouch before jump. Pullback before push. Prepares the audience for what's coming and makes action more readable.

Application: Major actions need setup. The bigger the action, the bigger the anticipation. Can be physical, visual, or timing-based. Skipping anticipation makes motion feel robotic.

3. Staging

Directing attention to what matters. Composition, contrast, motion, and timing work together to make intent clear. One clear idea per moment.

Application: Audiences can only focus on one thing at a time. Use all available tools (position, lighting, motion, timing) to make the important element unmistakable.

4. Straight Ahead & Pose to Pose

Two animation approaches. Straight ahead: draw frame-by-frame for fluid, spontaneous motion. Pose to pose: define key poses, then fill between for control and clarity. Most work combines both.

Application: Use straight ahead for dynamic, unpredictable motion. Use pose to pose for planned, precise sequences. Procedural/physics = straight ahead. Scripted = pose to pose.

5. Follow Through & Overlapping Action

Different parts of an object/character move at different rates and stop at different times. Nothing stops all at once. Overlapping creates natural, organic motion.

Application: Lead with the root/core, secondary elements follow. Heavier elements lag more. Lighter elements react faster. Creates complexity and believability.

6. Slow In & Slow Out

Objects accelerate and decelerate—they don't move at constant speed. More frames at start and end of motion, fewer in the middle. Creates natural, physics-based movement.

Application: Linear motion looks mechanical. Ease-in for exits, ease-out for entrances. Ease-in-out for contained motion. The curve defines the character of movement.

7. Arc

Natural motion follows curved paths, not straight lines. Joints rotate, creating inherent arcs. Thrown objects follow parabolas. Straight line motion is rare in nature.

Application: When something moves from A to B, the path between matters. Check motion paths—mechanical if straight, natural if curved. Exceptions: robots, specific mechanical effects.

8. Secondary Action

Supporting actions that reinforce the primary action without distracting from it. Facial expression supporting body language. Environmental response to character action.

Application: Primary action tells the story. Secondary actions enrich it. Secondary should never dominate. Remove secondary if it distracts from primary.

9. Timing

The number of frames/duration determines the feel of motion. Fewer frames = faster = lighter/snappier. More frames = slower = heavier/more deliberate. Timing is the foundation of personality.

Application: Experiment with timing to find the right feel. Context matters—same duration can feel fast or slow depending on expectations. Timing conveys weight, emotion, and energy.

10. Exaggeration

Push beyond reality for clarity and impact. Doesn't mean "unrealistic"—means amplifying the essence. More extreme poses, more dramatic timing, clearer staging.

Application: Reality can be subtle, unclear, boring. Animation clarifies reality by pushing what matters. Find the truth and amplify it. Different contexts allow different levels.

11. Solid Drawing

Understanding of form, weight, volume, and three-dimensional space. Objects maintain their structure during motion. Drawings have weight, balance, and depth.

Application: Things have mass and occupy space. Maintain consistency during animation. Understand the structure of what you're animating. Avoid unintentional distortion.

12. Appeal

The quality that makes audiences want to watch. Not just "cute"—can be appealing through design, personality, or movement. Characters and motion should be engaging.

Application: Design and animate for your audience. Create emotional connection. Motion should feel intentional and satisfying. Every choice should serve engagement.

Applying Principles

  1. Start with purpose: What must the audience understand/feel?
  2. Stage clearly: Direct attention to what matters
  3. Time appropriately: Duration affects everything
  4. Ease naturally: No linear motion in nature
  5. Anticipate actions: Prepare for major moments
  6. Follow through: Let motion complete naturally
  7. Add depth: Secondary action enriches primary
  8. Exaggerate clarity: Push to communicate
  9. Maintain structure: Respect form and physics
  10. Design appeal: Make it worth watching

These principles transcend medium. Master them, adapt them, apply them thoughtfully.