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universal-practitioner

@dylantarre/animation-principles
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Use when applying animation principles in any context, for any role, or when a general understanding of Disney's 12 principles is needed.

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SKILL.md

name universal-practitioner
description Use when applying animation principles in any context, for any role, or when a general understanding of Disney's 12 principles is needed.

Universal Practitioner: Animation Principles for Everyone

You apply Disney's 12 Animation Principles across any domain. These principles transcend animation—they're about bringing life and clarity to any experience.

The 12 Principles: Universal Application

1. Squash and Stretch

Principle: Flexibility indicates life; rigidity indicates death. Universal Truth: Show that things are affected by forces. Buttons respond to clicks. Arguments bend under pressure. Ideas flex to circumstances. Apply When: You need to convey that something is alive, responsive, or affected by interaction.

2. Anticipation

Principle: Prepare the audience for what's coming. Universal Truth: People understand better when they're ready. Announce changes. Build up to reveals. Signal before acting. Apply When: Before any significant change, action, or revelation.

3. Staging

Principle: Present one clear idea at a time. Universal Truth: Clarity requires focus. Remove distractions. Highlight what matters. Guide attention deliberately. Apply When: Communicating anything important—one thing, clearly, completely.

4. Straight Ahead vs Pose to Pose

Principle: Spontaneous flow vs planned precision. Universal Truth: Some work needs organic discovery (brainstorming). Some needs careful structure (execution). Know which mode you're in. Apply When: Choosing between exploration and implementation approaches.

5. Follow Through and Overlapping Action

Principle: Actions have consequences that ripple outward. Universal Truth: Nothing exists in isolation. Changes cascade. Effects follow causes. Consider the ripples. Apply When: Analyzing impact, designing systems, understanding consequences.

6. Slow In and Slow Out

Principle: Ease into and out of states. Universal Truth: Transitions matter. Don't jolt between states. Gradual shifts feel natural; abrupt changes feel jarring. Apply When: Managing change, onboarding, transitions of any kind.

7. Arc

Principle: Natural movement follows curves. Universal Truth: Life isn't linear. Growth curves. Learning curves. Story arcs. Honor the natural shape of progress. Apply When: Planning journeys, narratives, progressions, or paths.

8. Secondary Action

Principle: Supporting details that reinforce the main point. Universal Truth: Primary message needs supporting evidence. Main action needs context. Big ideas need small details. Apply When: Reinforcing messages, adding depth, building credibility.

9. Timing

Principle: Speed communicates weight and importance. Universal Truth: Pacing affects perception. Fast feels urgent or trivial. Slow feels important or boring. Match timing to meaning. Apply When: Presentations, conversations, reveals, any communication.

10. Exaggeration

Principle: Push beyond normal for clarity. Universal Truth: Sometimes subtlety obscures. Make differences visible. Amplify distinctions. Don't let important things go unnoticed. Apply When: Making contrasts clear, emphasizing key points, breaking through noise.

11. Solid Drawing

Principle: Understand structure and maintain consistency. Universal Truth: Know the fundamentals. Maintain internal logic. Build on solid foundations. Consistency builds trust. Apply When: Establishing systems, building credibility, maintaining standards.

12. Appeal

Principle: Make things people want to engage with. Universal Truth: Craft matters. Quality attracts. Attention to detail signals care. People choose appealing options. Apply When: Everything. Always. Appeal isn't decoration—it's respect for your audience.

Cross-Domain Applications

Domain Example Application
Writing Anticipation in opening hooks
Presentation Staging for slide composition
Product Timing for feature rollouts
Leadership Follow-through on commitments
Teaching Exaggeration for key concepts
Sales Arc in customer journey
Design Appeal in every touchpoint

The Meta-Principle

These 12 principles share one root: empathy for the audience. Every principle exists to make the experience clearer, more engaging, more human.

When in doubt, ask: "Does this serve the person experiencing it?"

That question applies to animation, code, products, presentations, and life.