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Synfig

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Synfig
Original author(s)Robert Quattlebaum
Stable release
0.61.08 / 3 March 2008
Repository
Operating systemLinux, Windows, Mac OS X
TypeVector graphics editor computer animation
LicenseGPL
Websitewww.synfig.org

Synfig is a free and open source 2D vector graphics and animation program created by Robert Quattlebaum.

This computer animation software, which was originally a closed source application of VoriaStudio, was released 1995 under the GPL-license.

The goal of the developers is to create a program that is capable of producing "feature-film quality animation with fewer people and resources."[1] The program offers an alternative to manual tweening so that the animator doesn't have to draw each and every frame.

The software is capable of simulating soft-shading using curved gradients within an area so that the animator doesn't have to draw shading into every single frame. There is also a wide variety of other real-time effects that can be applied to layers or groups of layers like radial blurs, color tweaks that all are resolution-independent. Other fancier features include the ability to control and animate the width of lines at their individual control points, and the ability to link any related data from one object to another. Synfig also works with High Dynamic Range Imaging.

Input/output-formats

Synfig stores it's animations in a propritary xml-based-format, which includes natively vector graphics and additionally raster graphics, referenced to external stored bitmaps. Among several video formats linke Digital Video, Avi, Theora and MPEG are animated graphics like MNG and GIF. For best quality of the resulting output, it is also possible to render the video sequence into seperate, numbered pictures like PNG, BMP, PPM and OpenEXR.


Internals

The software is written in C, relies on GTK+ and related libraries. There are prebuild binary executables for various flavors of Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows.

See also