When people hear the word “animation“, they will probably think of high-priced Hollywood creations with high-quality graphics, which is also strongly associated with the term “CGI”. However, the differences between the two are quite drastic and the gap widens when you examine the technical definitions of the two.
Animation originally meant a sequence a hand-drawn cells played in sequence, each lovingly sketched or rotoscoped to create a fluid movement with a (mostly) stylized appearance. In recent years, the informal definition has changed to understand any animation that is not photorealistic or in film studio quality. It is no longer about the technique used, but about the quality and appearance of the finished sequence.
CGI, on the other hand, initially meant “graphics inserted into live-action scenes” – it was a way for directors to replace models with computer-generated graphics that could give their companies a little more scope and size. As with animation, the definition was twisted so that most or all of the project was represented in computer animation software. This is increasingly becoming the norm in many media, including online video, social media and TV advertising.
Examples of animated TV commercials:
Examples for TV-advertising with CGI:
With its own advantages and disadvantages, each style can completely change the quality of an end product:
Animation:
CGI.
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