home / skills / dylantarre / animation-principles / exaggerated-clarity

This skill helps you convey clear, powerful animation by applying exaggerated clarity principles to staging, timing, and expressive motion.

npx playbooks add skill dylantarre/animation-principles --skill exaggerated-clarity

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

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---
name: exaggerated-clarity
description: Use when motion needs to read clearly and powerfully—broad comedy, action highlights, important story beats, or any moment that must unmistakably communicate to the audience.
---

# Exaggerated Clarity

Think like a stage actor projecting to the back row. Subtlety is lost at speed. Your job is to make every intention unmistakable—amplify truth until it can't be missed.

## Core Mental Model

Before animating any key moment, ask: **Would this read from 50 feet away?**

Animation isn't reality—it's reality turned up to 11. Exaggeration isn't lying; it's telling the truth louder. Real life is too subtle for the screen.

## The 12 Principles Through Amplification

**Exaggeration** — The principle itself. Push every quality further than reality. Happy becomes ecstatic. Sad becomes devastated. Fast becomes blurred with speed.

**Staging** — Exaggeration needs clear framing. Silhouette tests: does the pose read as a black shape? If the attitude is unclear in silhouette, push the pose further.

**Squash & Stretch** — The most visible tool of exaggeration. Compress more than physics allows. Stretch beyond anatomy. The impossibility creates impact.

**Anticipation** — Exaggerated windup demands exaggerated payoff. Big anticipation sets up audience expectations—then exceed them.

**Timing** — Contrast creates clarity. Super-fast action against held poses. The extremes are what register. Middle speeds blur together.

**Solid Drawing** — Exaggerated proportions must still feel solid. A character stretched to absurdity should still have convincing mass. Volume creates believability within impossibility.

**Appeal** — Bold choices are appealing. Audiences respond to confidence. Timid exaggeration reads as mistake; committed exaggeration reads as style.

**Follow Through & Overlapping Action** — Exaggerate the delay. Let secondary elements trail dramatically. Hair that whips, clothes that swirl—push the physics of follow-through.

**Secondary Action** — Amplify supporting details. If a character is nervous, make their foot tap comically fast. Secondary action underscore primary emotion.

**Arcs** — Exaggerated motion follows exaggerated arcs. Wide sweeping curves for broad gestures. The bigger the arc, the more readable the motion.

**Slow In & Slow Out** — Extreme easing creates snap. Very slow buildup, instant action, extended settle. Contrast in timing is exaggeration in the time domain.

**Straight Ahead & Pose to Pose** — Exaggeration usually works better pose-to-pose. Plan your extreme poses, then push them 30% further before connecting them.

## Practical Application

**Exaggeration Scales:**
- Realistic: 100% (reference)
- Feature animation: 120-150%
- Broad comedy: 150-200%
- Squash-stretch animation: 200-300%
- Rubber hose: 300%+

**What to Exaggerate:**
- Poses: Push silhouettes further
- Timing: More contrast between fast and slow
- Expressions: Bigger facial range
- Physics: More squash, more stretch
- Reactions: Delay and amplify

**What NOT to Exaggerate:**
- Internal logic (rules you've established)
- Character consistency
- Emotional truth (exaggerate expression, not falseness)

When motion feels "mushy" or "unclear":
1. Strengthen silhouettes
2. Hold extreme poses longer
3. Reduce busy secondary action
4. Increase contrast in timing
5. Push poses 20% further

When motion feels "cartoony" (unintentionally):
1. Reduce squash/stretch percentage
2. Ground physics with more settle time
3. Add subtle secondary naturalistic motion
4. Pull back exaggeration to 120% instead of 200%

## The Golden Rule

**Exaggeration is clarity, not parody.** You're not making fun of movement—you're making it visible. The goal is for the audience to feel more, not to notice technique. When exaggeration serves story, it's invisible. When it serves itself, it's showboating.

Overview

This skill trains animators to amplify motion so every intention reads clearly and powerfully. It translates Disney-style exaggeration into practical, repeatable rules for staging, timing, poses, and secondary action. Use it to ensure important beats hit with unmistakable clarity without breaking emotional truth.

How this skill works

The skill inspects key poses, silhouettes, timing contrasts, squash-and-stretch, and secondary actions to find where signals become fuzzy at performance speed. It recommends concrete percentage targets for exaggeration, silhouette fixes, timing contrasts, and when to scale back. It emphasizes preserving internal logic and emotional truth while increasing visual read-through.

When to use it

  • Broad comedy or slapstick where every joke must read from a distance
  • Action highlights or stunts that require instant comprehension
  • Key story beats that need unmistakable emotional clarity
  • Early blocking and pose-to-pose planning to set readable extremes
  • When motion reads "mushy," unclear, or gets lost at speed

Best practices

  • Ask: would this read from 50 feet away? If not, push further.
  • Plan exaggerated key poses first (pose-to-pose), then connect them.
  • Strengthen silhouettes and hold extremes longer to register intent.
  • Use contrast in timing—very slow holds versus instant snaps.
  • Exaggerate expression and reaction, but keep character consistency and established rules.

Example use cases

  • Punch or slap impact: amplify anticipation, stretch at contact, long settle.
  • Comic pratfall: huge windup, extreme squash at landing, clear recovery beats.
  • Emotional reveal: larger-than-life facial extremes with held silhouettes.
  • Action sell: widen arcs and speed-contrast hits so audiences read hits instantly.
  • Character read-through test: silhouette-only playback to validate intent.

FAQ

How far should I push poses and timing?

Use the provided scales as guides: feature animation 120–150%, broad comedy 150–200%, squash-stretch rigs 200%+. Start conservative and increase until clarity is achieved without breaking character.

When will exaggeration feel like parody?

When exaggeration draws attention to technique instead of story. If the audience notices the stunt, dial back and refocus on emotional truth—exaggerate feeling, not falseness.

Should I always exaggerate secondary action?

No. Amplify secondary action to support the primary beat, but reduce or simplify it when it competes with silhouettes or timing contrast.