For this lesson, we'll explore working with Adobe Illustrator files in After Effects. While you don't need Illustrator to complete this tutorial, understanding the file structure will significantly improve your workflow and help you troubleshoot common issues that arise when importing vector assets.

This approach represents a fundamental shift from yesterday's lesson, where we worked primarily with raster formats like JPEGs and PNGs, along with basic video and audio files.

Yesterday's workflow focused on creating text elements directly in After Effects and importing static images—a perfectly valid approach for certain projects. However, this method doesn't reflect the reality of most professional animation environments, particularly in corporate communications and marketing.

In professional settings, the majority of visual assets originate from Adobe's creative suite. Social media advertisements are typically designed in Photoshop, while infographics, charts, corporate communications, and marketing materials are predominantly created in Illustrator. When these designs need animation, they're rarely built with motion in mind from the start.

Consider the visual hierarchy of data visualization: polished charts and graphs that catch your eye are almost certainly Illustrator creations, while their less aesthetically pleasing counterparts often originate from spreadsheet applications like Excel. Corporate logos, brand elements, and scalable graphics universally begin their lives as Illustrator files.

The most common After Effects workflow assumes this reality—that your source materials will be layered Photoshop or Illustrator files rather than individual image assets. This integration forms the backbone of professional motion graphics production.

Our example file demonstrates this typical structure: three social media platform charts (X, Instagram, and Facebook), a header reading "How many years did I do social media," and a background element. Each component exists as a separate layer in the Illustrator file, creating the foundation for individual animation control.

Understanding Illustrator's layer system is crucial here. Take the Facebook logo layer—it contains the F graphic, the white circle background, and a drop shadow, all combined into a single layer. This consolidation, while efficient for static design, creates specific challenges for animation that we'll address.

Pro tip: In both Photoshop and Illustrator, Option-clicking (Alt-clicking on PC) the eye icon beside any layer hides all other layers, allowing you to isolate elements quickly. This shortcut becomes invaluable when preparing files for animation.


Here's where many projects encounter their first hurdle: Illustrator users often don't create individual layers for every design element because Illustrator doesn't require this separation for static work. After Effects, however, demands this layer-based organization. Each Illustrator layer imports as a single After Effects layer, meaning complex graphics with multiple elements become single, non-divisible units.

Photoshop files handle this more naturally since everything exists as separate layers by default. Regardless of the source application, After Effects imports assets layer by layer, maintaining their original positioning and organization—a significant time-saver that eliminates manual layout work.

This positional preservation means you could theoretically create a Photoshop file with all elements in their final positions, import it into After Effects, and animate everything from those predetermined locations rather than animating into position. This workflow is particularly effective for complex layouts.

However, there's an important principle to follow: anything that can be created or modified in After Effects should be handled there, not in the source file. Take drop shadows, for example—while they might look perfect in Illustrator, they create problems in After Effects.

The drop shadow expands the layer's bounding box, shifting the calculated center point away from the visual center of your graphic. This offset complicates rotation and scaling operations, requiring manual anchor point adjustments. More critically, once imported, these effects become part of the static graphic and can't be modified or animated independently.

I should have removed these drop shadows from the logos before import—and I did remove them from the text elements because of the specific animations we'll apply. This preparation step, while sometimes overlooked, prevents numerous headaches during the animation process.

Beyond file import, several alternative workflows exist for Illustrator-After Effects integration. You can copy and paste shapes directly between applications, and numerous plugins facilitate the transfer of Illustrator graphics to After Effects as separate layers, even when they weren't originally structured that way.

While you don't need to master Illustrator, learning basic editing skills pays dividends. You'll frequently need to modify imported graphics—removing effects, separating elements, or adjusting layer organization. In my experience, no one creates graphics specifically for animation; you're almost always repurposing existing static designs.


This reality has defined much of my career: taking flat graphics and transforming them into animated content. The Noble Desktop logo we'll work with later exemplifies this challenge—it arrived as a flat EPS file that required complete reconstruction into layers before animation became possible.

Our project consists of three distinct sections, hence the multiple preview files. We'll begin with the second screen animation, then create the first screen, and finally combine them with a transitional animation that demonstrates scene-to-scene workflow techniques.

A critical naming convention note: avoid sequential naming like "infographic screen 1," "infographic screen 2," etc. After Effects interprets these as video sequences and attempts to import them as consecutive frames rather than individual compositions. Use descriptive names instead: "infographic intro," "infographic charts," "infographic conclusion."

The final animation showcases several advanced techniques. The transition between screens uses scaling and strategic color matching—the background of screen two matches the text color of screen one, creating a seamless visual flow when the text scales up to fill the frame.

This scene-based animation approach has virtually unlimited scalability. You can chain together multiple scenes, each with its own internal animations and transitions, creating sophisticated motion graphics that rival traditional video editing while offering far more creative control.

The transitions themselves can range from simple fades to complex animated sequences that would be impossible in traditional video editing software. This flexibility makes After Effects particularly powerful for creating engaging, multi-part visual narratives that hold audience attention across extended durations.