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Working in the Timeline

Lesson 8 from: Adobe After Effects Fundamentals

Philip Ebiner

Working in the Timeline

Lesson 8 from: Adobe After Effects Fundamentals

Philip Ebiner

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Lesson Info

8. Working in the Timeline

Next Lesson: Layer Properties

Lessons

Class Trailer

Chapter 1: Introduction

1

Class Updates & My Favorite CC 2020 Updates

06:22

Chapter 2: After Effects Basics

2

Understand the After Effects Workspace

05:39
3

Starting a New Composition

08:15
4

CC 2018 Update - Starting a New Composition from Footage

01:55
5

Adding Media to Your Project and the Timeline

05:08
6

Using the Basic After Effects Tools

10:20
7

Create a Perfect Circle, Alignment, and Shape Colors

03:04
8

Working in the Timeline

10:59
9

Layer Properties

08:57
10

Quiz: After Effects Basics

Chapter 3: Animating with Keyframes

11

Animating in After Effects

07:35
12

Position, Scale, and Rotation Animations

05:17
13

Tips to Make Your Animations Look More Nautral

04:21
14

Using the Graph Editor

05:32
15

Challenge - Bouncing Ball

01:01
16

Solution - Bouncing Ball

13:00
17

Quiz: Animating with Keyframes

Chapter 4: Shapes and Solid Layers

18

Working with Solid Layers and the Ken Burns Effects

07:07
19

Working with Shape Layers, Strokes, and Paths

06:24
20

Adding Layer Styles like Drop Shadow, Bevel, and Gradients

03:44
21

Shape Effects - Trim Path Animations, Wiggle, and Zig Zag

05:54
22

Quiz: Shapes and Solid Layers

Chapter 5: Important After Effects Skills

23

Track Matte Animations - Make Layers Appear and Disappear

08:37
24

Using Pre-Compositions to Group Layers

05:34
25

Easily Reverse Complicated Animations

02:14
26

Playing with Time

05:54
27

Blend Modes

06:05
28

Stabilize Shaky Footage

04:04
29

CC 2018 Update - Previewing and Favoriting Fonts

00:46
30

CC 2019 Update - Responsive Design Time

03:36
31

CC 2019 Content Aware Fill

03:55
32

CC 2019 Create Motion Graphic Templates

08:37
33

Quiz: Important After Effects Skills

Chapter 6: Motion Graphics Projects

34

Intro to Motion Graphics Projects

00:53
35

Clean Lower Third

09:22
36

Logo Reveal Animation Bumper

13:25
37

Colorful Transition

16:59
38

Text with Mask Path Animation

10:05
39

Text Bubble Animation

13:39
40

Weather App 1

16:41
41

Weather App 2

08:21
42

Weather App 3

06:59
43

Quiz: Motion Graphics Projects

Chapter 7: Flat Animation Challenge

44

Flat Animation Challenge

02:47
45

Phil Designs his Flat Animation Scene

01:23
46

Animating Fireworks with the Repeater Effect

15:02

Chapter 8: Flat Animation Challenge

47

Removing Green Screen Background

06:46
48

Adding a Background that Matches the Foreground

07:55
49

Adding Motion to a Still Image with the Puppet Tool

06:26
50

Adding Movement with the Ripple Effect

06:07
51

Quiz: Flat Animation Challenge

Chapter 9: Green Screen (Chromakeying)

52

Intro to 3D

10:04
53

Swinging 3D Text Animation

12:11
54

Build Out Your 3D Composition

05:47
55

Animating Our 3D Scene

07:38
56

Create Stars in After Effects

05:11
57

Quiz: Green Screen (Chromakeying)

Chapter 10: 3D Animations and the Camera Tool

58

Using the Rotoscope Tool

06:55
59

Cleaning Up Your Edges

07:21
60

Finishing Our Rotobrush Animation

07:33
61

Quiz: 3D Animations and the Camera Tool

Chapter 11: Rotoscoping

62

Easy Screen Replacement with Masks

09:56
63

Replacing a Screen Version 2

13:49
64

Screen Replacement with Mocha

07:13
65

CC 2019 Update - Native Mocha AE Plugin

05:08
66

Quiz: Rotoscoping

Chapter 12: Screen Replacements

67

Using the Puppet Pin Tool

04:33
68

Animating Your Puppet Pins

03:04
69

Animated Blinking Eyes

08:21
70

Adding Perspective with Animated Clouds

07:10
71

CC 2018 Update - Advanced Puppet Pin Tool

02:08
72

Quiz: Screen Replacements

Chapter 13: Puppet Tool Animations

73

Applying Text Animation Presets

05:59
74

Create a Page Turn Effect with CC Page Turn

10:05
75

Radial and Linear Wipes

03:20
76

Color Correction in After Effects

03:33
77

CC 2019 Update - Selective Color Adjustments

03:25
78

Quiz: Puppet Tool Animations

Chapter 14: Motion Tracking

79

Motion Tracking Basics

09:51
80

Tracking Text and Visual Effects to Video Clip

06:21
81

Tracking Rotation and Scale

11:33
82

Adding Details to Our Text

04:04
83

Quiz: Motion Tracking

Chapter 15: Character Animations

84

Intro to Character Animations

01:31
85

Design Your Character

14:32
86

Rigging Your Character

02:50
87

Animating Our Character

09:55
88

Adding the Animated Background

09:12
89

Adding Details to Character Movement

06:46
90

Adding the Paper Cut Out Look

05:29
91

Quiz: Character Animations

Chapter 16: Exporting from After Effects

92

Exporting an H264 File from After Effects

07:03
93

Exporting from After Effects with a Transparent Background

04:03
94

Exporting from After Effects through Adobe Media Encoder

04:40
95

CC 2018 Update - Exporting an Animated GIF from Adobe Media Encoder

02:14
96

Create an Animated GIF from After Effects CC 2017

07:03

Chapter 17: After Effects Workflow & Tips

97

Audio Tips for After Effects

02:19
98

Working with Premiere Pro

05:54
99

Quiz: After Effects Workflow & Tips

Chapter 18: Expressions

100

Expressions Basics

07:24
101

Animate a Flickering Light with Expressions

17:35
102

Quiz: Expressions

Chapter 19: Conclusion

103

Conclusion

00:44

Final Quiz

104

Final Quiz

Lesson Info

Working in the Timeline

next. Let's look at the timeline. So I have that perfect circle that we created in the last lesson. I'm actually going to turn off the stroke just by changing the pixels to zero and I'm also going to add my kangaroo photo back onto the timeline just dragging it beneath my circle. Cool, so we already learned how to zoom in and out of our timeline just by dragging this top bar or by zooming in down here, you'll also notice that there's this other work area bar. If I press the space button, It's going to play through all five seconds of this composition and you'll see that after effects is automatically set up to just repeat to loop the play. So it's going to continuously keep playing and that's because in after effects often we're creating these little animations and we just want to see it over and over to see how it looks. Instead of having to press the play button over and over. What if we were creating some sort of animation at the very beginning of this and say this is just a basic a...

nimation where our circle pops on Well how do we do that? We can just drag this shape layer over to the right and you'll see that now it's off at this time. And then if we drag through it's on now, that's not really an animation, we're going to be covering how to actually animate things in the next section. So coming right up. But now if I play through this, it's going to Pop on right there, let's make it a little later at 10 frames for example, go back to the start. Okay, play there now, it takes a while for it to go through the five seconds and then go back to the start again. Say we want to zoom in on this timeframe for example, the 1st 2nd more easily take your work area bar and now we can drag this in to one second for example, and you can see that it's highlighted. Now if I take my time indicator and I move it into this work area, then I press the space bar. You can see that it loops the play just for this area of the workspace, which is super beneficial as you create your more intricate graphics. one other use for this. Let me bring back our video clip. So let me bring in this video sample and then a quick way to create a composition based off the size and settings of your actual media asset is just to drag your media asset into the composition button right here, You'll see that it created this video sample composition and then down here it's the right size. So it's the same aspect, it's also the right length, so it's all two minutes and 20 seconds of this video which was a video for another class of mine. Say you have a video clip, but you only want to add graphics to a certain part of it. Say I want to add a title graphic right here between five seconds and 15 seconds. Well I can take my work area bar and I can move this to around five seconds And then I can take the end of it and move it to 15 seconds. And now if I zoom in just with this bar right here and now I have this set up so that my work area is going from six seconds to about 15 seconds and you can see that if I click in the middle of this work space bar, it moves the whole work area to move the end in or out. You have to click on the end of the work area and then drag so that's how you can sort of zoom in and work on a specific part of the clip. What if we want to actually just trim this whole composition to this specific part of the clip because as you're working on this project, you might not even need everything that's to the right of this sort of work area. If you go up to composition then choose trim comp to work area. What happens is is it trims it to that work area that we had set up so now it's just that six seconds to 15. Now we can't go ahead and zoom back out from this. You see that now our zoom bar, if we use this, it just allows us to zoom in and out from that six frame, six seconds to 15 seconds. So that's one thing to note. We can't of course undo this or we can go back to composition and our composition settings and now you'll see that the duration is nine seconds. Say we want this to go for 10 seconds If I put in 10 seconds and then click OK then I zoom out. Okay, here's another thing with your timeline, look what happened at the end of this video clip, you'll see that. Oh, this video clip actually disappears. You can see that there's this little cut point right here and that's because in the previous part we went to composition trimmed to comp to work area. It actually trimmed this media clip or the video clip to the camp area as well. So to extend this, what we can do is just hover over with our mouse over this end of the layer and drag to the right now. If we go through and scrub through this video plays through till the end of our work area. One keyboard shortcut that I like and it's really helpful is the command left or right bracket shortcut for Windows users, it would be control left or right bracket. So if I press command and then I press right bracket with the kangaroo layer selected it actually moves this layer up. I can choose the command left bracket to move it back down. So this is how you can reorder layers just on your keyboard. Alright. That's a lot with the timeline over here on the right, but there's all of these buttons over here on the left and we'll be going over all of these things in future lessons as they become more applicable. But the things I want you to know our first on the very far left is this little eyeball icon and you have these different columns with these buttons where if you check on or off, it includes that little icon. So turn off this layer, which is what the eyeball icon is for. You can just press that eyeball for the layer and it makes it basically disappear. It turns it on or off. We don't have any audio in these clips but we do in the video sample. And that's what this next column is. The audio. And so if you want to turn on or off audio for a specific layer, just turn that audio audio on or off with that column back to our other composition. I'm going to move my time indicator to this point where we have both layers. This next column is to solo layers and this might be more beneficial or easier to understand if we have more layers. So let me duplicate this shape layer. one to quickly duplicate it a layer instead of going up to our shape to one creating another layer, we can select it in our timeline and press command D or control D for you. Windows users or you can also copy and paste by selecting it, pressing command C. And then command V. That's control for Pc users. So from now on, if I ever say command, it's typically going to be controlled for pc users. Sometimes it's different and so you might be confused and you'll have to go up to the help keyboard shortcuts menu, just find out what it is. Or you can always ask me in the Q and a tab. And I'm just going to move this layer over to the right. So now we have three layers and this solo option allows us to basically make only one of those layers appear. So if I click solo shape layer one, only this layer appears same if for the kangaroo, it makes all the other layers disappear automatically. And this is beneficial if you have projects where you have dozens or hundreds of layers in a single composition, which actually has happened to me in in the past. And you want to really just see one layer, you can use that solo button. The lock button right here, locks this layer. So now I can't move it around. You'll see that it does this little highlight when I try to click it and I can't do anything to this layer. And that's beneficial if you're done with the layer and you don't want to do anything mess it up, move it around. Just click the lock button to the right, you have this dropdown arrow. And so you see that if I click this it drops down, drops down more options. We're gonna be covering these things which are more properties for each layer in the next lesson. So I'll just skip over that for now. The next is this color option and this is the color of your layers. So you see that the photo layer was automatically this purple color or this violet. And then the shape layer was this blue. If you want to customize the color of your layers, you can click that color block and then change the color and this is helpful for organizing your compositions. Say you have again, a bunch of layers, you want to make sure that you can easily find the right layer. And if you know that hey all my red layers are text layers for example which this isn't then it's easier to find that the source name is the name of your layer. If you click that source layer text up here, it changes to the layer name and this is how you can actually rename your layers in your timeline to be more organized. So instead of shape layer one and shape layer to which can get confusing in the long run. What I would do is I would select shape layer one and then press the return key on your keyboard that highlights this title and now I can call this Circle one or a Blue Circle. Then if I go to this second layer and I changed the color by going up to the fill, changing it to read, clicking on the title, pressing return and then call it red circle. This is just an easier way to again navigate, making you more efficient and that's pretty much as far as I want to go today in this lesson. I know that this lesson in the past lessons, it's more of that, hey Phil we're just going to go around and go through all the menu options. This is boring, but don't worry, the next few lessons are going to get a little bit more interesting. We're going to start animating very soon. We just have to cover the basics right now. So I hope you're learning. I hope your understanding, if I'm going too fast, please let me know if I'm going too slow. Please let me know but also be a little patient because there's other learners who are starting from scratch and need a little bit more information. Thanks so much for watching. And in the next lesson we'll go over more of the layer options that are within each of these layers

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