Working with Solid Layers and the Ken Burns Effects
Philip Ebiner
Lesson Info
18. Working with Solid Layers and the Ken Burns Effects
Lessons
Class Updates & My Favorite CC 2020 Updates
06:22 2Understand the After Effects Workspace
05:39 3Starting a New Composition
08:15 4CC 2018 Update - Starting a New Composition from Footage
01:55 5Adding Media to Your Project and the Timeline
05:08 6Using the Basic After Effects Tools
10:20Create a Perfect Circle, Alignment, and Shape Colors
03:04 8Working in the Timeline
10:59 9Layer Properties
08:57 10Quiz: After Effects Basics
11Animating in After Effects
07:35 12Position, Scale, and Rotation Animations
05:17 13Tips to Make Your Animations Look More Nautral
04:21 14Using the Graph Editor
05:32 15Challenge - Bouncing Ball
01:01 16Solution - Bouncing Ball
13:00 17Quiz: Animating with Keyframes
18Working with Solid Layers and the Ken Burns Effects
07:07 19Working with Shape Layers, Strokes, and Paths
06:24 20Adding Layer Styles like Drop Shadow, Bevel, and Gradients
03:44 21Shape Effects - Trim Path Animations, Wiggle, and Zig Zag
05:54 22Quiz: Shapes and Solid Layers
23Track Matte Animations - Make Layers Appear and Disappear
08:37 24Using Pre-Compositions to Group Layers
05:34 25Easily Reverse Complicated Animations
02:14 26Playing with Time
05:54 27Blend Modes
06:05 28Stabilize Shaky Footage
04:04 29CC 2018 Update - Previewing and Favoriting Fonts
00:46 30CC 2019 Update - Responsive Design Time
03:36 31CC 2019 Content Aware Fill
03:55 32CC 2019 Create Motion Graphic Templates
08:37 33Quiz: Important After Effects Skills
34Intro to Motion Graphics Projects
00:53 35Clean Lower Third
09:22 36Logo Reveal Animation Bumper
13:25 37Colorful Transition
16:59 38Text with Mask Path Animation
10:05 39Text Bubble Animation
13:39 40Weather App 1
16:41 41Weather App 2
08:21 42Weather App 3
06:59 43Quiz: Motion Graphics Projects
44Flat Animation Challenge
02:47 45Phil Designs his Flat Animation Scene
01:23 46Animating Fireworks with the Repeater Effect
15:02 47Removing Green Screen Background
06:46 48Adding a Background that Matches the Foreground
07:55 49Adding Motion to a Still Image with the Puppet Tool
06:26 50Adding Movement with the Ripple Effect
06:07 51Quiz: Flat Animation Challenge
52Intro to 3D
10:04 53Swinging 3D Text Animation
12:11 54Build Out Your 3D Composition
05:47 55Animating Our 3D Scene
07:38 56Create Stars in After Effects
05:11 57Quiz: Green Screen (Chromakeying)
58Using the Rotoscope Tool
06:55 59Cleaning Up Your Edges
07:21 60Finishing Our Rotobrush Animation
07:33 61Quiz: 3D Animations and the Camera Tool
62Easy Screen Replacement with Masks
09:56 63Replacing a Screen Version 2
13:49 64Screen Replacement with Mocha
07:13 65CC 2019 Update - Native Mocha AE Plugin
05:08 66Quiz: Rotoscoping
67Using the Puppet Pin Tool
04:33 68Animating Your Puppet Pins
03:04 69Animated Blinking Eyes
08:21 70Adding Perspective with Animated Clouds
07:10 71CC 2018 Update - Advanced Puppet Pin Tool
02:08 72Quiz: Screen Replacements
73Applying Text Animation Presets
05:59 74Create a Page Turn Effect with CC Page Turn
10:05 75Radial and Linear Wipes
03:20 76Color Correction in After Effects
03:33 77CC 2019 Update - Selective Color Adjustments
03:25 78Quiz: Puppet Tool Animations
79Motion Tracking Basics
09:51 80Tracking Text and Visual Effects to Video Clip
06:21 81Tracking Rotation and Scale
11:33 82Adding Details to Our Text
04:04 83Quiz: Motion Tracking
84Intro to Character Animations
01:31 85Design Your Character
14:32 86Rigging Your Character
02:50 87Animating Our Character
09:55 88Adding the Animated Background
09:12 89Adding Details to Character Movement
06:46 90Adding the Paper Cut Out Look
05:29 91Quiz: Character Animations
92Exporting an H264 File from After Effects
07:03 93Exporting from After Effects with a Transparent Background
04:03 94Exporting from After Effects through Adobe Media Encoder
04:40 95CC 2018 Update - Exporting an Animated GIF from Adobe Media Encoder
02:14 96Create an Animated GIF from After Effects CC 2017
07:03 97Audio Tips for After Effects
02:19 98Working with Premiere Pro
05:54 99Quiz: After Effects Workflow & Tips
100Expressions Basics
07:24 101Animate a Flickering Light with Expressions
17:35 102Quiz: Expressions
103Conclusion
00:44 104Final Quiz
Lesson Info
Working with Solid Layers and the Ken Burns Effects
Welcome to this new section of the After effects Course this section is diving deeper into shapes and solids in the past sections. We've looked at shapes and that was when we used our shape tool up here and we created shapes. So you can see that we create shapes down here. Solids are a little bit different and they have different properties and you can do different things with them to create a solid. Go up to layer new and solid. Also, just take note while we're here that this is a cool way to create some different types of layers, such as a light layer or a camera. These are things were beginning to in the future. So if I choose solid, it brings up this window where we can choose our solid settings, you can give it a name, you can also change the color and this is going to be a full frame sort of color or shape. It typically matches your comp size or you can just click this button to make at the comp size, then click OK, when you do that, it automatically pops up in your timeline and ...
it also pops up in this folder over here, which is a different kind of cool thing compared to your shape layers. Because if you want to reuse these solids in different compositions, you can actually do that right from your project bin rather than recreating it as a shape layer. Alright, so let me actually rename these just so you know, this is solid, this is shape. So we also learned that with the shape layers that if you double click the rectangle tool it creates the shape layer, that's the full size of your composition. So actually I'm going to delete this original shape we created now called this one shape. Because you might be wondering, okay, we have a shape and a solid. What's the difference if I turn off and on the shape you're like, it basically does the same thing. Right, Well they do play different purposes. One of the reasons why I like using solids is that sometimes when you apply different effects to a layer, if you want it to be applied to the entire composition, you might need to use a solid layer, something we'll get into in the future as well. Another thing is that the way that you create masks. So with a shape, you can't really create a mask. If I take my, for example, star tool and I want to create a star mask with from the shape. It doesn't do it, it just creates another shape. Yes, I can turn off the rectangle and now I have a star but it's a little different than creating a mask with a solid. If I do that with a solid, let's turn off our shape and let's take our polygon tool and I have my solid layer selected and I create a mask. You can see that I create this shape. But what's actually happening is it's just sort of a cutout within the salt layer. Think of it as if you've ever baked cookies and you've rolled out your dough and then you get those little cookie cutters and you like stamp it onto your dough. It's basically stamping this shape onto it. But everything outside of it is still there and we can actually delete this mask if we want to undo it or if you see now we have this mask within our layer, we can invert it. So just by clicking this invert button, now we have this solid layer with this cutout beneath it. And let me just show you how that works by bringing in our kangaroo photo and that's in the background. Let me just make sure it's the right size, turning off the solid scaling down our kangaroo. Let's turn back on our solid. So now we have this mask and we can take this mask, we can move it around. And there's also different options within the mass properties that you don't get with a shape layer, such as if you see when I drop this down, you have feathering and you also have mask expansion which expands the mass. Using the same sort of shape that you created it with earlier. This is a great way to create a quick vignette in after effects. Let me delete this solid to create a quick vignette just press command y which is your new solid button or control y if you're on a pc make it black click OK And then click. Ok Now we have this solid that's the same size as our composition. And if we want to perfectly oval than yet, choose the lips tool, double click, which creates this oval mask, we'll need to invert it. So we're getting closer now it's just sort of this frame and then we can use feathering to feather out the edges. So we get more of a vignette and then depending if you want it brighter or darker, you can decrease the opacity of the mask itself or you can decrease the opacity of this entire layer. It's the same thing you're doing. But see this opacity is just for this mask. But if you bring up the transform properties of this entire layer, you also get the opacity of the layer. So let me just turn this on or off. It's a quick way to create that vignette and adding vignettes is a cool style. Don't go overboard with it. I know some people tend to add vignettes to everything they do but it is a nice sort of cinematic style and then of course we can animate all of these properties as well. If we want it to expand out, we can set a key frame for the mask expansion as it is. Then we can go back in time and then we can shrink our mask expansion. Let's actually make our opacity. 100 So we can see what's happening. I'm just drinking it all the way until it's completely gone. -528 Pixels. Now let's play through this And then you have this nice sort of reveal, nice sort of reveal one quick last thing. This doesn't have to do with vignettes or solid layers. But one way to create a more sort of dynamic look with photos is what's called the ken burns effect where your photos sort of subtly grow or shrink or move from side to side and you can do that with an easy position or scale animation. So I'm going to with my kangaroo, bring up scale Set a key frame for 49%. Put that at the beginning. Now set another key frame for let's just do 53%,, put that later on and now we can play through this. It's a little fast. So I'm just going to extend that a little bit. That's a nice little opening animation with the vignette and that's done with the salt layer and then a little scale animation. Cool. So that's a bit about solid layers. In the next lesson, we're going to be going back to shape layers because there's more things that you can do with shape layers that we definitely need to cover
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