Download Article
Download Article
FireAlpaca is a very user-friendly and useful drawing tool, but you can also use it to animate. Whether one is an animator or a novice artist, anyone can create a simple or complex animation in FireAlpaca. Start at step one to make your own animation in FireAlpaca!
Steps
-
1Create a new file by clicking "File" on the top of the screen or window and clicking "New...". Alternatively, use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl/Command + N.
-
2Review the dialog box "Create New Image". Adjust the width, height, paper size, background color, and resolution to your liking. Once done, click "OK".Advertisement
-
3Click "View" at the top of screen or window and click "Onion Skin Mode". This makes it possible to export the layers as frames and put them together in an animation, and also enables you to see multiple frames at once while animating.
-
4Create a new folder for the frames. When it comes time to export the layers, each layer will be its own PNG file. It is useful to have all these images in one folder to avoid cluttering your files.
Advertisement
-
1Select a brush and color, and draw your first frame.
-
2Create a new frame by adding a new layer. Click "Layers" at the top of the screen or window and click "Add".
-
3Draw your next frame, using the last frame as a reference. This is why onion skin comes in handy—it is far easier to draw a frame when you can see the last frame right under it.
-
4Continue adding and drawing frames, and going back to frames to edit them as necessary, until you are satisfied with your progress.
- You can easily duplicate frames by clicking "Layers" and clicking "Duplicate" while in the frame you want to duplicate.
- Add more frames in between frames by adding a layer, and dragging it in between the two layers you want it in.
- If you sketched your frames, go back to draw the lines and color the frames (unless you want a simplistic animation).
-
5Click "View" and click "AutoPlay" to see your animation.
- You will see a dialog box and be able to adjust the FPS (frames per second, which determines the speed). You can go back to edit your frames if the animation does not turn out as expected, or you are not finished with it. Continue editing your animation and AutoPlaying it until you are satisfied.
Advertisement
-
1Click "File" and click "Export Layers (Onion Skin Mode)...". Select the folder you made while setting up, and each layer will save itself as a PNG in that folder.
-
2Review the dialog box asking whether to open AlpacaDouga. Click "Yes" (unless you choose to put the frames together in a separate program). This part of the article shows how to put together the animation in AlpacaDouga.
-
3Wait for AlpacaDouga to open in your web browser. Then click the button that says "Select all files (.gif/.jpg/.png)". If the website opens in Japanese, the button will look similar.
- Select all the frames in the folder you exported the frames to, and scroll down the page to see your animation.
- You can change the website language to English or Japanese at the top right corner of the screen.
-
4Choose your desired FPS and completion size using the dropdowns, and click the large button that says "Create a GIF Animation".
- Make sure that "Insert FireAlpaca Logo" is unchecked, unless you want the FireAlpaca logo in your animation.
- You may not want to leave "Loop Replay" checked if you have a long animation.
-
5Wait for the large button to turn yellow and say "OK!! Download." Click it to download your animation. It will take you to a download page for the GIF.
-
6Finished. Enjoy your animation!
Advertisement
Community Q&A
Search
-
QuestionHow can I color animations in FireAlpaca?HEPP THE HORRIBLECommunity AnswerTry duplicating the frame, coloring the bottom one with the bucket tool (with expand 2 or 3), or hand-coloring it. It's okay if you go over the lines. Next, merge the duplicate on top with the colored one and it looks fine!
-
QuestionCan I do a 3-5 minute animation using FireAlpaca?Community AnswerYes. You can make it as long as you want. Just know the longer your animation is, the more time you'll spend on it. Animation is tough, and you'll need to spend a lot of time, even on a shorter project.
-
QuestionMy fire alpaca doesn't have Onion skin mode, what do I do now?Community AnswerUpdate to the latest version by downloading it again. This should be easy, but make sure to download it from the official site.
Ask a Question
200 characters left
Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered.
Submit
Advertisement
Video
Tips
- If the animation can be viewed full-screen, such as on YouTube, a good canvas size to use is 1920px * 1080px.Thanks
- You can use a program like Windows Movie Maker or iMovie to put the frames together. This can be better than using AlpacaDouga, since you can speed up or slow down certain parts of the animationThanks
- To avoid more work, create one frame of a background and duplicate it, then draw your frames in front of it.Thanks
Tips from our Readers
The advice in this section is based on the lived experiences of wikiHow readers like you. If you have a helpful tip you’d like to share on wikiHow, please submit it in the field below.
- FireAlpaca counts a folder as a single frame so you can use a folder instead of just one layer if you want things like coloring, background, etc. to be a lot easier.
- FireAlpaca has ended its AlpacaDouga service, so you may need another service or tutorial to successfully turn your art into an animation.
Submit a Tip
All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
Name
Please provide your name and last initial
Thanks for submitting a tip for review!
Advertisement
About This Article
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 154,558 times.
Advertisement