The Flip Book Is A Common Method Of Animation. It Can Be Simply Done, But Many Require Great Detail For A More Fuller Picture And For It To Be More Dramatic.
It Is Simply Done By Drawing On Image On A Piece Of Paper. Then On The Next Paper Underneath The 1st, The Same Image Is Drawn Again, But Slightly Different. This Continues Till A Simple Animation Is Complete. The Collection Of Paper Is Then Flicked From On Page To The Next, Where It Will Seem Like The Image Is Moving Showing A Simple Animation.

Another Example Of Animation Is The Praxinoscope. The Praxinoscope, Invented By French Scientist Charles-Emile Reynaud Was A More Sophisticated Version Of The Zoetrope. It Used The Same Basic Mechanism Of A Strip Of Images Placed On The Inside Of A Spinning Cylinder, But Instead Of Viewing It Through Slits, It Was Viewed In A Series Of Small, Stationary Mirrors Around The Inside Of The Cylinder, So That The Animation Would Stay In Place, And Provide A Clearer Image And Better Quality. Reynaud Also Developed A Larger Version Of The Praxinoscope That Could Be Projected Onto A Screen, Called The Theatre Opaque
