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- Well hello everybody, I'm Nathaniel Dodson
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from tutvid.com, welcome to this
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Adobe After Effects tutorial
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where today we're gonna take a look at five
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very basic, simple animations
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that are perfect if you're just getting started
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in Adobe After Effects.
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You're gonna learn a whole lot about animation here.
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If you do enjoy this tutorial,
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well make sure you subscribe to my channel
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so you never miss any future video editing,
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After Effects, Adobe Premiere Pro, you name it, tutorials,
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and without further ado, let's jump in
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and get this thing started.
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Alrighty, here in After Effects,
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I'm working with a new composition
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that I've sized to 2560 by 1440,
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and I'm at 60 frames per second as well.
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If you're creating a new composition to follow along,
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go ahead and use these settings.
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You can also go to composition, composition settings,
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and change the settings
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of an already existing composition in there.
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I also have my background color set to the hex code 333333.
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Just a pretty dark gray.
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I also added this little image to the background,
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I set its opacity to 5%, locked the background down
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so it doesn't move or I don't accidentally adjust it.
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It's not really part of this tutorial,
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just if you're looking at it and you see it there,
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that's what's going on.
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Here's where the good stuff begins.
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Alright, let's grab the text tool,
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and type out the words, or the number and the word,
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"5 easy", and over in the character panel,
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I'm going to choose Bebas Bold as my font.
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I'm gonna set it to 350 pixels in size.
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And then I'm gonna use my align panel
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to center this text to my current composition.
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Now I'm gonna add some more text
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by using the type tool again.
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I'm gonna type out the word "animations".
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One again I'm gonna use Bebas Bold,
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this is a separate piece of text of course,
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but this time, the text is gonna be a size of 195 pixels.
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And again, I'm gonna align this to the middle
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of my composition.
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And I'm gonna drag it below my first piece of text
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to give a little spacing,
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just as much spacing as you think is right,
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I'm gonna add a little bit here as I see fit.
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Now once again, I'm gonna add even more text
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by typing in, this time, "in After Effects",
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and, I'm going to again use Bebas Bold,
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I'm gonna change the size here to 113 pixels.
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Again, I'll align this to the center of my composition
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and adjust the vertical positioning
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just to give a little space here as well,
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so just make sure all this text is spaced out nicely.
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After that I can grab the ellipse tool,
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and drag out a perfect circle.
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I can do that by holding down the shift key.
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And here up in the top bar, I'm gonna chose
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to give it a white stroke,
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I don't want it to have a fill,
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so I can click on the word fill
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and just make sure I hit the slash in there.
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I'm gonna add a 25 pixel white stroke to this shape,
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so you can select stroke, make sure it's filled
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with solid white, then choose to make sure it's 25 pixels.
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Here again we'll use the align panel,
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and we'll get the horizontal and vertical centers
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aligned to this composition,
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and you can adjust it just a little bit
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or adjust your text to make sure your text
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is perfectly in the middle of this ellipse.
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Now, grab all three pieces of text.
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In order to align this text,
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you may need to first lock the ellipse layer
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so you don't select it, because technically
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it is on top of all this stuff.
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And then just shift click the three pieces of text,
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and you can nudge them up or down like I said,
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just to make sure they get really into the center
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of this circle.
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So let's get animating here.
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I'm gonna select the largest piece of text,
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the "5 easy", but I'm gonna select it
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down in the layers area.
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And I'm gonna hit the letter S.
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That's gonna bring up my scaling options.
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Then I'll click on that little stopwatch icon right there,
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and that's gonna drop a key frame
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and allow me to start animating.
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Key frames are essential.
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They're the little stopping points in our animation.
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I'm gonna set the scaling here to 0%,
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it's gonna make the text disappear, don't worry.
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And then we're gonna move out a little bit,
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and when I say move out, I'm just dragging my playhead
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down the timeline a little bit,
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I had my playhead all the way at the first frame,
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I'm gonna drag my playhead down the timeline
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just a little bit, it doesn't have to be too far,
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but you could stretch it out as much as you like.
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This part is kind of up to you.
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Wherever you see fit, and then I'm gonna change the scaling
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back to 100%.
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And After Effects will auto-add a new key frame
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and fill in the animation between those key frames.
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But, you can see here, when we play through
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this zooming animation, it looks bad,
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because it begins at the bottom left corner
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and zooms in from there, I want it to look
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like a natural zoom up from the middle.
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What is going on here?
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Well, see this little node thing right here?
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That's the anchor point, and the scaling is done,
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really, based upon where this point is.
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If this point were in the middle of the text,
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we'd scale right from the center
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and get a proper zooming effect like we want.
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Good news is, we can change this.
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It's a little weird, but we can change it.
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All we need to do is hold down the command and option keys,
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or on the Windows, the control and alt keys,
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and double click this tool up here in the top toolbar,
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it's called the pan behind tool.
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It's up here in the toolbar at the top of our screen.
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And you can watch the point move, boom, right to the middle,
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or right to the center of our text.
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And now when we play through the animation,
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we don't even need to reanimate anything,
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it works exactly like we want,
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except that it's still pretty mechanical
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and maybe a little blocky looking.
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That's because we need to add something called easing.
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So let's add some easing to make it look
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a little smoother and more natural.
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I'm gonna select both key frames by shift clicking them,
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and then I will right click on one of the key frames
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and choose key frame assistant, and then easy ease.
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This is gonna make the whole animation much nicer,
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smoother, and just more professional.
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Let's move along to another type of animation here,
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a fade animation.
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I'll leave the "5 easy" layer open
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so I can see the key frames down there,
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I'm talking about leaving it open
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down here in the layers panel.
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And then I'll open the animations layer.
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And I'm gonna move the playhead
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to where the "5 easy" animation stops,
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and I'm gonna hit the letter T
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to bring up the opacity option.
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And I'm gonna drop a key frame here
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by once again clicking on that little stop watch icon,
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and I will choose to reduce the opacity to 0%.
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This is gonna make our text disappear.
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Then I'll move the playhead down the timeline a little bit.
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However far we want.
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And I'll change the opacity back to 100.
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Select both of these new key frames,
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we're gonna do that same easy ease trick,
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it all looks pretty good.
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Now that we've got our first two animations down,
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let's do a pop-out animation
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with sort of an added bounce effect
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at the end of the animation.
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We're gonna take things a little step further here
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now that we've gotten two basic animations down.
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Select the with After Effects layer,
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down in the layers area, and hit S
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to once again open up scaling.
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And once more, I will hold down the command option
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or control alt key, and I'm gonna double click
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that pan behind tool.
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Again, that's just to reset my anchor point
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to the center of this piece of text.
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And then I'm gonna drop a key frame
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by clicking on the stop watch icon,
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where on the timeline the fade in animation completes.
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Then I'm gonna go and I'm gonna deselect
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that little chain link icon here
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between my scaling, this is between the X and the Y axis,
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this is gonna allow us to change the scaling
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of just one axis of our text,
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while not messing around with the other.
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I want to reduce the X axis scale to 0%,
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and move the playhead down the timeline a little bit
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and reset the X scale to 100%.
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This will give us this effect
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where the text is just sort of shooting out side to side,
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from the center of this piece of text.
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It's a really neat little animation.
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Now what I want to do is select both of those key frames,
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again by shift clicking them,
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add that easy ease by right clicking
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and go down to the key frame assistant
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and choose to apply that same easy ease
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to these key frames as well.
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But with these key frames still selected,
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we're gonna click on this little graph editor icon,
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to bring up this kind of complicated looking graph.
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This is where the magic happens.
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I'll drag this little handle and pull the red line
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up past the dashed line.
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This will tell After Effects
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kind of to overextend the animation
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before letting it slide or snap back
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to the proper 100% size.
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We can tweak this graph line here
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to perfect the easing as well, if we want.
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Now, let's click on the graph editor icon
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to get back to the original timeline.
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I'll preview the effect and see how it's looking.
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Pretty, pretty cool.
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There are so many great applications for this effect.
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Definitely something you want to remember.
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Now let's animate our circle to draw around this text
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as soon as it finishes appearing.
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That is, as soon as the text finishes appearing.
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I'm gonna unlock the shape layer
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and twirl down the little arrow and find contents,
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and twirl that down, and get down into ellipse one.
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I'm gonna hit the little arrow next to add,
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right there on sort of the top right corner if you will
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of that layer, and I'm gonna choose to add
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a trim paths here.
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Move the playhead to where the text animation finishes
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on your timeline, and reduce the end parameter to 0%.
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This is going to sort of zip up and hide
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the entire ellipse stroke.
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Then just move the playhead a little further
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down the timeline, set the end parameter to 100%,
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and let After Effects do the auto-key framing
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and animation magic for you.
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Let's go ahead and preview this effect at this point,
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and it's looking pretty good.
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I think I'm gonna select both of my key frames here,
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and move this animation back,
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so it takes place kind of as the final piece of text
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is animating in, to help this whole animation
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to feel just a little bit tighter
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and more well put together.
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We can also select both these key frames
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and add an easy ease to really complete the animation here.
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Now there are also a ton of great animation possibilities
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within some of the pretty amazing effects
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offered in After Effects.
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So