After Effects, Animation Day 4
Objectives
- Reinforce concepts from days 1-3 through review and practice
- Learn how to precompose multiple layers into a single one
- Understand the difference between parenting and precomposing layers, and when to use one over the other
- Learn how to create and edit text layers
- Render a composition to a playable video file using Adobe Media Encoder
Link to files: https://files.learnsoftware.org/after-effects-animation/
Outline
Hook:
- Show an example of the final project we’ll be making today (Combing most of what we’ve learned so far and creating a scene with it)
The Project:
- Set up the scene:
- Import the illustrator file as a composition
- Open the newly created composition and change its length to 7-10 seconds
- Create a sky using a shape layer (Rectangle Tool), position it beneath everything else.
- Create another shape layer for the house’s window
- Begin animating the scene:
- Darken the sky
- Option A: Apply and keyframe a brightness & Contrast effect to the sky to make turn into night
- Option B: Keyframe the shape’s fill color to make it darker for night (Shape Layer -> contents -> rectangle -> Fill -> color) (Allows for more control over the color change)
- Darken the sky
- Precomposing
- Position the sun and moon so that they are on opposite ends of the composition
- Select both sun and moon and precompose them
- Show how the precomposition acts as a single layer (and can access individual layers again by opening that new composition)
- Open up the PrecompositionsExample project file and briefly show how it uses precompositions (multiple precomps, effects applied to different ones).
- NOTE: Because this project is just for demonstration purposes, only the instructor needs to open it to show to students (REMEMBER TO SAVE BEFORE OPENING)
- Explain when to precompose vs parent layers (can technically parent instead of precomposing in this case)
- Reduces the number of layers in a single composition
- Parenting only affects basic transformation, the effects applied to a parent layer do not apply to its children
- Open up the PrecompositionsExample project file and briefly show how it uses precompositions (multiple precomps, effects applied to different ones).
- Make the sun and moon rise and set:
- Keyframe the rotation new sun and moon composition so that they rise and set as the sky darkens
- Darken the scenery
- Select the hills and house and precompose them
- Apply and keyframe a brightness & Contrast effect to the new composition to make it darken as the sky darkens
- Select the hills and house and precompose them
- Text Layers
- Create a text layer and write something (e.g. “Good Night!”)
- Introduce the Character and Paragraph panels and let students play around with the font, color, size, and alignment
- Keyframe a property of the text to make it appear (e.g. rise up from behind the hills or somewhere else off screen, fade in transparency, scale up from a scale of zero, etc.)
Bonus: Could apply a glow effect to the sun and moon
Rendering an Animation as an MP4 (After Effects doesn’t render to any playable video files on Windows)
- Add composition to the Render Queue
- Composition -> Add to Adobe Media Encoder Queue
- Change codec and other settings (Preset)
- Choose file name and render location (Output File)
If there’s extra time:
- Help students upload their animation to Box to share with others
Conclusion
- Recap: Today we learned:
- How to animate shape layer properties
- How to precompose layers to make animation easier
- How to create and edit text layers
- How to render an animation into a playable video file