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2023-02-24 00:30:59: Older Animations

While the specific project from that date isn't widely known, the history of "older animations" covers a fascinating journey from hand-drawn frames to the digital era.

As animation moved to television, studios like introduced "limited animation." To save time and money, they only animated parts of a character that moved (like the mouth), while keeping the rest of the body static. While less fluid than theatrical films, this era gave us icons like The Flintstones , The Transformers , and Voltron . The Final Flourish of Hand-Drawn Art (1990s) Older Animations 2023-02-24 00:30:59

Moving Miracles: The Evolution and Legacy of Older Animations While the specific project from that date isn't

Each second of film required 24 individual drawings. Teams of artists—often heavily staffed by women in the Ink and Paint departments —traced and colored every single frame by hand. The Final Flourish of Hand-Drawn Art (1990s) Moving

In 1937, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs proved that audiences would sit through—and love—a feature-length animated story, forever changing the film industry. The Saturday Morning Revolution (1960s–1980s)

The journey began with experimentation. In 1908, Émile Cohl created , widely considered the first fully animated cartoon. These early works were often surreal, featuring line drawings that transformed and morphed in ways that felt like magic to audiences of the time. The Golden Age and the "Ink and Paint" Era (1930s–1950s)

Long before the pixel-perfect precision of modern CGI, animation was a medium defined by the sweat, ink, and ingenuity of artists working frame by frame. From the flickering silhouettes of the early 1900s to the lush hand-drawn features of the 1990s, "older" animation carries a distinct texture and charm that continues to captivate audiences today. The Pioneers of the Pencil (1900–1920s)