--- name: naturalistic-motion description: Use when animation should feel organic and lifelike—creature animation, realistic characters, nature elements, or any motion that needs to breathe with authentic living quality. --- # Naturalistic Motion Think like a biologist watching life unfold. Nothing in nature moves mechanically. Everything breathes, adjusts, responds. Life is continuous subtle motion. ## Core Mental Model Before animating anything alive, ask: **What is this creature feeling and responding to?** Living things are never truly still. They shift weight, breathe, notice, adjust. Naturalistic motion isn't about copying reality—it's about capturing aliveness. ## The 12 Principles Through Organic Life **Secondary Action** — Life is layered motion. While a character talks, they breathe. While they breathe, they blink. While they blink, their weight shifts. Stack subtle actions. **Follow Through & Overlapping Action** — Bodies are systems of connected parts. Movement cascades through joints and soft tissue. Nothing moves in isolation. **Arcs** — Nature abhors straight lines. Every joint creates rotation. Every movement traces curves. Study the path of a hand gesture—it's never linear. **Slow In & Slow Out** — Organic motion accelerates and decelerates continuously. Muscles engage and release. This is what makes movement look "alive" rather than robotic. **Timing** — Life has varied timing. Quick glances, slow stretches, medium walks. The diversity of speeds creates believable organism behavior. **Squash & Stretch** — Flesh is malleable. Skin wrinkles, muscles bulge, fat jiggles. Even subtle squash and stretch sells organic tissue. **Anticipation** — Living things telegraph intention. Watch a cat before it pounces. The body organizes itself before action. Include preparatory micro-movements. **Solid Drawing** — Anatomy matters. Understand skeletal structure, muscle groups, and how they connect. Organic motion respects physical construction. **Appeal** — Naturalistic doesn't mean realistic. Appealing organic motion is idealized life—the essence of a cat, not a veterinary diagram. **Exaggeration** — Subtle exaggeration. Naturalistic motion pushes organic qualities just 10-20% past reality. Enough to read clearly, not enough to break believability. **Staging** — Let organic motion read. Don't let naturalistic complexity become visual noise. Clarity serves believability. **Straight Ahead & Pose to Pose** — Organic motion often benefits from straight ahead animation for its emergent quality. Let movement discover itself. ## Practical Application **Signs of Life:** - Breathing: Constant subtle chest/belly movement - Weight shifts: Never perfectly balanced - Micro-saccades: Eyes are never frozen - Postural adjustments: Comfort-seeking behavior - Environmental awareness: Reactions to sound, light, temperature **Common Naturalistic Mistakes:** - Twinning: Both arms doing exactly the same thing (never happens in nature) - Perfect symmetry: Living poses are asymmetrical - IK lock: Limbs shouldn't feel pinned to points in space - Mechanical timing: Uniform speed reads as robotic When motion feels "dead": 1. Add breathing rhythm 2. Introduce subtle weight shifts 3. Offset timing between left/right 4. Include environmental micro-reactions When motion feels "noisy": 1. Reduce secondary motion layers 2. Clarify the primary intention 3. Slow down and simplify 4. Establish clearer pose hierarchies **Reference is Essential:** - Study video reference of real creatures - Film yourself performing the action - Watch slow-motion footage to understand mechanics - Observe animals at rest, not just in action ## The Golden Rule **Living things are always doing something, even when doing nothing.** The baseline state of life is gentle motion. Stillness in animation equals death. Let your creatures breathe.