![]() Examples include The Good Dinosaur, Luca and especially Turning Red the latter also employs Wingding Eyes and other stylised expressions that are often used in this art style. Several recent Pixar movies, while 3D animated and therefore lack the thin outlines the style is named after, otherwise resemble this visual style, with the characters having large, often pear-shaped heads, round eyes and bean-shaped mouths.Hayop Ka!: The Nimfa Dimaano Story sports a lineless variant of this style, making it stand out compared to other examples.See also Tooth Strip, Sphere Eyes, Black Bead Eyes, Black Dot Pupils. However, it was often done out of necessity since the simplistic designs made things easier on the animators at the time.Ĭompare Puni Plush and Animesque, contrast with Thick-Line Animation. ![]() Thin-line animation is actually Older Than Television, since many cartoon shorts during The Silent Age of Animation (particularly those made by Disney and Max and Dave Fleischer) featured rounded ball-and-noodle art-styles and thin outlines. As such, please do not examples of shows that simply have thin outlines - they also need rounded/noodle-like styles to qualify. Though the term tends to be used more specifically for works that not only have thin lines and round shapes, but also bean-shaped heads, bean-shaped mouths and worm-like teeth, so works that have the former but not the latter don’t tend to get labeled as such. Stuff alleging that certain animated films and many animators in The '90s who graduated from the California Insitute of the Arts heavily copied Disney's animation and art style, note coincidentally, CalArts was founded by Walt Disney himself which has since morphed into any animated work from the 21st century that uses this style that one considers "samey-looking", despite similar art styles being the norm since the infancy of the medium itself. It is also known as the "CalArts Style", a pejorative term originally coined by The Ren & Stimpy Show co-creator John Kricfalusi in a post on his blog John K. It also may be due to the widespread adoption of High Definition (HD) televisions - before HD, small features such as thin lines in an image tended to flicker and/or disappear depending on their angle and motion HD allowed the freedom for this new, previously unattainable style. The need for quicker, cheaper animation after the economic downturn may also drive the desire for more cheap, yet still pleasing animation styles. Different coloring techniques with digital art may have removed the need for thicker lines, and thus it only remains when it's a stylistic choice. The emergence of anime and their influences on western cartoonists have made them focused less on detail. This style may have emerged for a number of different reasons. All while still being distinctively western. ![]() Thin-line animation is a stylistic trend that has emerged in The New '10s based more around thinner lines, rounder shapes and noodle-like appendages. The Nostalgia Critic, Are Kids Shows Better NOW Than Ever?
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