answersLogoWhite

0

Specifically, claymation is made by first creating a "puppet" out of clay. Then, this puppet is taken to somewhere where the animator can animate it, possibly in a set, poses the character, then takes one picture of it. The animator checks to see if the character is in a position he/she likes, moves the puppet slightly, then takes another picture. The pictures that the animator is taking are the frames of a movie. Each one by itself looks like a still picture, but if played one after another at a fast speed, it looks as though the puppet is moving all by itself. The animator keeps taking pictures, moving the puppet only slightly, taking a picture, etc., until the puppet has completed the motion that the animator wanted to achieve. This process usually takes a long time, even for the shortest movies because the time it takes to move the puppet is longer than the frame that the animator is getting out of it.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?