(Page 1 of 1 pages for this article )

Friday, May 01, 2009

Filed under: Motion GraphicsVisual Effects

After Effects Apprentice Video Tutorial #5

Chris and Trish Meyer | 05/01

A gentle introduction to expressions.

We’ve recently released After Effects Apprentice (2nd Edition). The DVD-ROM that comes with the book includes an hour and a half of video tutorials that provide gentle introductions to major features inside After Effects, such as text and expressions. We are releasing these videos one per month here on PVC; they are also available on Focal Press’ web site - make sure you visit their After Effects micro-site for more free chapters and tutorials.

In this fifth video, we provide a gentle introduction to expressions, showing how to use the pickwhip to easily link one property to another, modify that property using very simple math, plus recover from errors. We also show how to use two of the most useful expressions: “wiggle” (to randomize virtually any parameter), and “linear” (to easily convert between differing parameter ranges, such as degrees to percentage). Click on the Play Video link below, and enjoy!

(Note: For those who are hearing-impaired, Lynda.com has added Closed Captioning to these tutorials. They are available here. If you do not have a Lynda.com subscription, click here for a free 7-day pass.)

After Effects Apprentice was designed for students looking to learn After Effects from scratch, as well as those who do not use AE full time (such as editors or web designers). It starts gently with an introduction to keyframing, and progresses through the important features (such as masks, mattes, effects, text, audio, 3D space, shape layers, expressions, parenting, and building advanced hierarchies of compositions) until you end up keying, stabilizing, and compositing a shot in high def. The second edition has been fully revamped for After Effects CS4, and includes integration with Photoshop CS4 Extended and Flash Professional CS4.

Click to play audio / video »

(Page 1 of 1 pages for this article )

           



You must be registered to comment. This is an effort to reduce spam. Please REGISTER HERE.

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:


 
Deeper Modes of Expression, Part 2: Interpolation Methods
Chris Meyer | 02/07

This simple method is our favorite replacement for a calculator.

As we noted last month, we’re serializing the Deeper Modes of Expression bonus chapter from our book Creating…

CINEMA 4D + After Effects
Chris Meyer | 01/26

We finally released a comprehensive video course on integrating the two.

Maxon’s CINEMA 4D is our 3D application of choice because it integrates so well with our main tool, Adobe After Effects. Although we’ve written about it and demonstrated it in sessions and classes, we never got around…

Deeper Modes of Expression, Part 1: Useful Math Expressions
Chris Meyer | 01/03

Extending your knowledge of expressions in After Effects.

Many of you are familiar with our book, Creating Motion Graphics with After Effects. As imposing as it may be in print, some miss that there’s another 180+…




Advertisements












Partner Text Links



Copyright 2008 ProVideo Coalition LLC