A curated list of awesome libraries, tools, books, and resources for creating web animations.
Awesome Web Animation is a curated list of resources for creating animations on the web. It compiles libraries, tools, books, and videos covering technologies like SVG, CSS, Canvas, and JavaScript to help developers add motion and interactivity to their projects. The list addresses the challenge of finding quality animation tools in a fragmented ecosystem.
Frontend developers, UI/UX designers, and creative coders who want to implement animations in web applications using modern libraries and best practices.
It saves time by aggregating the most useful and well-maintained animation resources in one place, with clear categorization and community validation. Developers choose it for its comprehensiveness and focus on practical, production-ready tools.
A list of awesome web animation libraries, books, apps etc.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Categorizes animation tools across SVG, CSS, Canvas, scroll, text, and React, as shown in the detailed contents section with specific entries like GSAP and Framer Motion.
Includes curated books and video tutorials, such as 'Creating Web Animations' and Yuri Artyukh's YouTube channel, providing both theoretical and practical education.
Features handpicked tools like SVG Artista and Animista for creating animations without deep coding, listed under the GUI tools section for easy access.
Offers a Netlify-hosted web version for improved browsing and navigation, as indicated by the deploy status badge and link in the README.
The list merely aggregates resources without offering guidance on which tool is best for specific scenarios, leaving users to research and compare independently.
As a static curated list, it may not be frequently updated, leading to broken links or outdated library versions, which is a common issue with resource compilations.
Does not include code snippets, demos, or implementation tutorials for the listed tools, requiring users to visit external sites for practical usage.