Creating effective country labels requires a strategic approach to text animation. Begin by assigning your text elements to use the corresponding bar as a track matte—this technique allows the bar's animation to reveal the text progressively. When you apply this method, the bar layer automatically becomes invisible, so you'll need to manually re-enable its visibility. For instance, when setting up France's label, configure the track matte column to reference the France bar, then restore the bar's visibility. This same process applies to all countries: the United States text uses the US bar as its track matte, with the bar visibility restored afterward.

This approach creates a sophisticated animation where text appears to emerge from within the bars themselves, creating a cohesive visual narrative. The effect transforms static data into dynamic storytelling, making your charts more engaging for viewers.

When positioning numerical values, you have two strategic options that significantly impact your animation possibilities. Values placed outside the bars limit your track matte options—the technique described above won't work effectively because the text sits beyond the bar's boundaries. However, positioning numbers inside the bars opens up creative opportunities. With internal placement, you can apply the same track matte technique to have the bars reveal the numerical data, creating a unified animation sequence where both labels and values emerge together.

For shape layer animations, trim paths represents the gold standard for creating drawing-on effects. This shape layer-exclusive feature provides the equivalent functionality of the write-on effect but with more precision and control. To access these specialized tools, open your shape layer and locate the Add button—this reveals effects that exist nowhere else in After Effects.

These shape layer effects offer creative possibilities ranging from practical to experimental. While effects like twist and wiggle transform provide entertaining distortions, trim paths serves a more professional purpose. It excels at creating the illusion that your graphics are being hand-drawn in real-time.

Implementing trim paths requires a specific setup for optimal results. The effect works exclusively with stroke-based shapes—avoid using it with filled objects, as the results appear unpredictable and unprofessional. For a standard one-second animation, animate the End property from 0% to 100%. This creates a smooth, progressive reveal that feels natural and purposeful. The technique works particularly well for infographic elements, logo reveals, and technical diagrams where precision matters.


When working with filled shapes, trim paths produces inconsistent results that can undermine your professional presentation. Stick to outlined, stroke-based graphics for predictable, polished outcomes.

The gradient wipe effect introduces organic randomness to your animations through a sophisticated masking technique. This effect requires a reference layer—typically a solid with fractal noise applied—to control the animation pattern. Create a new solid layer and apply the fractal noise effect to generate a cloud-like pattern that will serve as your gradient map.

Fractal noise offers extensive customization beyond basic cloud patterns. In 2026, motion designers increasingly use custom gradient maps created in Photoshop or generated from video footage to achieve unique, branded animation styles. The beauty of gradient wipe lies in its versatility—you can use static images, animated footage, or procedurally generated patterns as your control layer.

To implement gradient wipe, apply the effect to your target layer (such as your grid), then specify your fractal noise layer as the gradient source. The effect reads the grayscale values of your reference layer, using lighter areas to reveal your content first, followed by darker regions. This creates an organic, non-linear animation that feels more natural than traditional linear wipes.

The reference layer can remain hidden throughout your composition—gradient wipe reads its pixel values regardless of visibility. This technique works across all layer types and scales beautifully for everything from subtle texture reveals to dramatic scene transitions. Contemporary motion designers often combine gradient wipe with other effects to create signature animation styles that distinguish their work.


Consider extending your animation by including the numerical values and color bars in your sequence. While the basic tutorial focuses on core techniques, professional implementations benefit from cohesive animation timing across all elements.

Shape layer anchor points present a unique challenge due to the parametric nature of shape tools. Unlike bezier paths drawn with the pen tool, shapes created with rectangle, ellipse, and polygon tools maintain special properties that enable dynamic adjustment of size, roundness, and other parameters. This flexibility comes at the cost of anchor point editability.

When trim paths doesn't start from your desired position, work within the shape's transform properties rather than attempting to modify anchor points directly. Access the shape's individual transform settings within the shape layer hierarchy and adjust the rotation value to reposition where the animation begins. A -180° rotation, for example, moves the starting point to the opposite side of your rectangle.

Converting parametric shapes to bezier paths enables full anchor point control but eliminates the dynamic properties that make shapes powerful for responsive design. In professional workflows, this trade-off rarely justifies the conversion unless specific anchor point manipulation is absolutely essential to your animation concept. The parametric nature of shape tools provides more value for most motion graphics applications, especially when working with data visualization where precise, adjustable geometries matter more than custom anchor point placement.