
staging-mastery
by dylantarre
Disney's 12 Animation Principles - Claude Code Skill Marketplace
SKILL.md
name: staging-mastery description: Use when composing scenes, designing layouts, directing user attention, or ensuring a single clear idea is communicated at any given moment.
Staging Mastery
The Clarity Principle
Staging is the presentation of an idea so that it is unmistakably clear. Borrowed from theater, this principle addresses animation's core challenge: the audience has limited time to comprehend each moment. Poor staging creates confusion; masterful staging creates effortless understanding.
Core Theory
One Idea Per Moment: The eye cannot process competing focal points simultaneously. Every frame should have exactly one primary point of interest. Secondary elements support, never compete.
Silhouette Test: An action should be readable in pure silhouette. If the pose isn't clear as a black shape against white, the staging fails. This test remains relevant across all visual media.
The Staging Toolkit
Contrast: Important elements differ from surroundings (size, color, movement, detail level) Isolation: Negative space around focal points Leading lines: Compositional elements pointing toward the subject Depth positioning: Foreground/background separation clarifies spatial relationships Motion differential: Still backgrounds make moving subjects pop; static subjects stand out against motion
The Hierarchy of Attention
- Primary action: What must be seen (the story point)
- Secondary action: What enriches without distracting (supporting detail)
- Ambient motion: What creates life without demanding attention (background activity)
Each layer should be clearly distinguished through contrast in timing, scale, or position.
Interaction with Other Principles
Anticipation serves staging: The wind-up draws attention to where action will occur.
Timing creates staging: Faster elements attract attention; slower elements recede.
Appeal depends on staging: Even beautifully designed characters fail if poorly presented.
Secondary action must not upstage: Supporting movements stay subordinate through reduced amplitude and offset timing.
Domain Applications
UI/Motion Design
- Modal dialogs: dim background, center and scale the focal element
- Form validation: isolate error states through color and motion
- Onboarding: spotlight techniques literally stage new features
- Navigation transitions: clear origin/destination relationship
Character Animation
- Dialogue scenes: speaking character has motion priority
- Action sequences: clear silhouettes at key poses
- Crowd scenes: hero character differentiated through timing/positioning
- Emotional beats: isolation through pause and stillness
Data Visualization
- Chart animations: sequential reveals prevent overwhelm
- Dashboard updates: staged entry draws attention to changes
- Comparison views: clear visual hierarchy between datasets
Presentation Design
- Slide builds: one idea revealed at a time
- Transitions: reinforce narrative flow
- Emphasis: motion draws attention to current point
Common Mistakes
- Competing focal points: Multiple elements fighting for attention
- Buried story points: Important action lost in visual noise
- Symmetrical staging: Creates static, unclear compositions
- Uniform motion: Everything moving equally means nothing stands out
The Negative Space Principle
What you don't show is as important as what you show. Empty space creates breathing room for the eye. Cluttered staging exhausts attention. Master stagers are master editors.
Implementation Heuristic
Before animating, identify the single most important element in each moment. Design all other elements to support it through contrast, positioning, and timing subordination. If you can't identify one clear focal point, the staging needs work.
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