After Effects, Animation Day 1
Screencast
Objectives
- Understand what After Effects is and isn’t
- Learn how to create a composition and change its settings
- Become familiar with the software’s workspace
- Learn the basics of keyframe animation and a layer-based workflow within the software
Link to files: https://files.learnsoftware.org/after-effects-animation/
Outline
Hook: Show a demo reel that illustrates what After Effects can be used for.
Introduction:
- Names, positions, goals for the class etc.
- Find out their experience/comfort level with After Effects
- Explain that this courses focuses on the basics (e.g. we won’t be going in depth on specific effects)
What is After Effects:
- Explain the main function(s)/purpose of After Effects (including what it isn’t: not for video editing, not for graphic design, not for frame-by-frame hand drawn animation).
- “After Effects is like animating in PowerPoint, except significantly more powerful and complicated.”
Getting Started:
- Create a new project and composition
- Explain what compositions are (e.g. like creating a new timeline in Premiere or a new artboard in Illustrator).
- Width and Height = 1920 x 1080
- Change to 24 frames a second for this project
- Change duration to 5 seconds for this project
- Give the composition a name before clicking “OK”
- Show how to change composition settings afterwards (composition > composition settings)
- Show how to save a project
- Explain the difference between a project file and a playable video file (we will cover exporting and rendering on day 4)
Becoming Familiar with the Workspace:
- Take some time to explain how the workspace is structured and functions
- Project Panel/Effects
- Composition panel
- Zoom options
- Toggle transparency display
- Effects/Align/Paragraph side panel
- Timeline/Layers panel
- Effects panel (appears in the same area as project panel when a layer is selected)
- Introduce the basic navigation tools
- Zoom: Scroll Wheel OR comma & period
- Zoom (Timeline): Alt + Scroll Wheel
- Pan (Viewport & Timeline): Hold space + click and drag
- Move forward or backward one frame: Command + arrow keys
- Play Animation: Spacebar
- Understanding the timeline and layers:
- Show how the newly added images have become layers within the composition and are represented on the timeline (same length as composition by default but can be shortened or lengthened)
- Hide and reveal the top layer to show the layer underneath
- Play around with the layer order
Import Files from Day 1
- File -> Import, OR COMMAND + I, OR simply drag files from explorer into the project tab
- Drag at least two of the images into the composition (timeline area)
Basic Transformations
- Introduce the basic transformations we can make to our layers using the following shortcuts (present each student with a keyboard shortcut handout: Group Box folder > training > teaching materials > shortcut bookmarks)
- Position: P (can also just click and drag in the viewer)
- You may need to explain the X-Y coordinate system After Effects uses for determining position (X = horizontal, Y = vertical)
- Scale: S (can also just click and drag on of the little squares that surround the selected layer in the viewer)
- Rotation: R
- Opacity (transparency): T
- Anchor Point: A
- Position: P (can also just click and drag in the viewer)
Keyframes
- Definition/what they do
- What they look like and how to use them in After Effects
- Use stopwatch icon to enable a specific property within a layer for animation (automatically creating the first keyframe) – (can be done in the layer area and in the effect controls tab)
- Point out how once the stopwatch is enabled, any changes made to the property will automatically create a keyframe
- Playhead position on timeline determines where the keyframe will be created
- Move, edit, and delete existing keyframes
- Reveal all keyframes/animated properties on a selected layer (“U”)
- Use stopwatch icon to enable a specific property within a layer for animation (automatically creating the first keyframe) – (can be done in the layer area and in the effect controls tab)
Example Activity:
- Animate one of the basic transformations of a layer using keyframes (e.g. make one of the images move from one side of the composition to the other or change opacity)
If there’s extra time:
- Introduce effects (e.g. Gaussian Blur, Tint, Brightness & Contrast, Glow)
- Show how you can stack/layer effects
- Show how you can animate effect properties just like transformations via layers or effect controls tab
- Activity option: Could give students some time to explore the different effects
Conclusion
- Recap: Today we learned
- What After Effects is
- What compositions are and how to create them
- How layers work
- How to position, scale, and rotate a layer
- What keyframes are and how to use them