>>5903708Isn't that picrel an example enough? As far as the waves on the edges of her face... that indicates shivering/vibrating to me, even though we only see one picture of the wave (not it and another state i.e. two waves out of sync).
Whereas the first pic in thread showed multiple snapshots throughout time (from beginning hand position, to ending hand position, and in-between), the ghibli pic only shows one snap shot of the (exaggerated) vibration.
I'm thinking it may work because the amplitude is tiny compared to her face (small humps) plus I know her face would not look like that normally (context of knowing her regular face.) While in the OP pic, the "amplitude" is large (all the way across the picture), and it's only 1 (or a half) a cycle. (For the shiver, there should "feel" like many cycles i.e. high frequency.)
So I guess you could add "tiny waves where a smooth surface once was" to your list, maybe? The only thing it'd work for is vibration though.
Hmmm. I think long and light things (e.g. hair or scarf) moving at an angle (relative to the direction of gravity) could indicate wind if the subject is standing on the ground, or falling, if the subject is not standing on anything. But then maybe that reduces to the vase thing that
>>5902883 mentioned.
So that's all I have come up with that doesn't use motion lines / multi-snapshots. I have no idea about the blink. It is a short movement but unlike shivers, it's very uneven (you blink for a fraction of a fraction of second, then your eyes can be open hundreds of times longer.)
I guess something to note about blinking though is, your should otherwise not move. So maybe showing a neutral face with eyelids closed, could do something... I give up. Good luck