01842nas a2200241 4500000000100000008004100001260005900042653002600101653001200127653000900139653002500148653001300173653002100186653002500207653002400232100001800256700002000274245005800294856015000352300001200502520106100514020002501575 d bInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.10aHistoric preservation10aHistory10aIban10aindigenous knowledge10aMah Meri10afolklore stories10aindigenous knowledge10aintangible heritage1 aDelas Santano1 aFauzan Mustaffa00aRe-imagining Folklore Stories in Illustrated Animatic uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85016027308&doi=10.1109%2fVSMM.2016.7863212&partnerID=40&md5=87f39d3de7dce7c1d4de4e0f0fc9e1b0 a366-3713 aFolklore stories are always passed on from one generation to the next through word of mouth. Grandmothers telling the stories to the grand children or mothers and fathers telling the bedtime stories to their kids are typical ways. These stories often have a meaningful message for the audience. Sometimes it is a message to remind people of a mannerism, of social values and or even stories about a certain history or tradition in a specific culture. The unique medium that they are using to tell and preserve the stories is a great tool that also represents their culture. But the stories themselves may die, as when storyteller passes on. If the generation that continues the work doesn t embrace the stories as part of their life, then the soul of the story craft itself may disappear. The research aimed to preserve Malaysian folklore stories in a digital form for the future of cultural heritage. Some of the unique stories were selected from two different Malaysian cultures then an artist illustrated the stories through his visual interpretation. a9781467389938 (ISBN)