In this comprehensive lesson series, we'll leverage the text animation starter file located in the text animation folder. This file builds upon our previous shape layer animation work, but shifts focus to a powerful creative technique: treating text as graphical elements rather than simple typography. This approach opens up sophisticated animation possibilities that elevate your motion graphics beyond basic text treatments.
When opening the file, you may encounter a version compatibility message—simply click "Okay" to proceed. If you've been following along with previous lessons sequentially, you can continue working from your existing project file instead. This starter file represents the final output from our shape animation section, providing a solid foundation for the advanced techniques we'll explore.
Before diving into animation, proper project organization is crucial for professional workflows. I'll save this file with a clear naming convention—"text animation" followed by my name and project identifier. This systematic approach becomes invaluable when managing multiple projects or collaborating with teams.
Our focus for this section centers on the percentage graph element visible in the composition. To maintain a clean, manageable timeline, I'll isolate this element into its own pre-composition. This technique allows unlimited layer additions without cluttering the main timeline—a best practice that scales beautifully in complex projects.
To select the specific element, I'll right-click and choose "Select" to locate the graph percentage bars layer. While you could manually highlight the layer if known, the visual selection method from the composition window proves incredibly efficient, especially in layer-heavy projects. This workflow optimization saves significant time in professional environments.
With the layer selected, we'll create a pre-composition—a fundamental After Effects technique that every motion designer should master. Right-click the layer and select "Pre-compose," or use the menu path Layer > Pre-compose. The keyboard shortcut Command+Shift+C (Mac) or Control+Shift+C (PC) provides the fastest access once memorized.
I'll maintain all layer attributes to preserve the original composition dimensions and properties. This ensures our pre-comp inherits the exact physical dimensions of the source content. I prefer customizing the default naming convention by removing the automatic "1" suffix—while this is personal preference, clear naming conventions significantly improve project navigation and team collaboration.
Organizational discipline separates amateur from professional work. I'll immediately move this pre-comp into our designated pre-comps folder, maintaining the project structure that becomes essential as complexity grows. This habit prevents the chaos that derails many motion graphics projects.
Opening the pre-comp reveals all nested compositions from the shape animation HUD, listed in layer display order. Currently, we're working with the percentage bars element, which appears nearly square but requires dimensional precision for our planned animations.
The existing graphic dimensions limit our animation scope—the bars need room to scale and transform without hitting composition boundaries. To address this constraint, I'll expand the composition size through Composition > Composition Settings. Unlocking the aspect ratio allows independent width and height adjustments.
I'll set dimensions to 350×350 pixels, creating a perfect square with sufficient scaling headroom. The preview button provides real-time updates as you modify settings. This perfect square format not only accommodates our scaling animations but also provides geometric consistency that enhances visual appeal.
To maintain reference accuracy during reconstruction, I'll convert the original graphic to a guide layer—a professional technique that provides visual reference without affecting final output. Setting the layer to 50% opacity and enabling "Guide Layer" makes it visible only within this pre-comp, invisible when used elsewhere. This functionality proves invaluable for template creation and client revisions.
Locking the guide layer prevents accidental movement that could compromise reference accuracy. With this foundation established, we can begin creating animated elements that will transform static graphics into dynamic, engaging visuals.
The reconstruction strategy involves creating three concentric circles as a single shape layer, enabling unified animation control while maintaining individual element properties. I'll build the percentage bars separately, demonstrating advanced text-to-graphics animation techniques that add professional polish to motion design work.
Accessing the ellipse tool requires pressing and holding the rectangle tool in the toolbar, revealing additional shape options. For these elements, I want stroke-only circles without fill—click the fill option and select "None," then customize stroke color and weight. I'll use a mid-tone gray for flexibility in later color adjustments.
Creating perfect circles efficiently leverages After Effects' built-in functionality. Double-clicking the ellipse tool automatically generates a circle matching the composition's dimensions exactly—in this case, 350×350 pixels. This technique eliminates guesswork and ensures geometric precision.
Fine-tuning the circle size involves hovering over the size parameter and scrubbing to adjust dimensions. The original reference reveals slight imperfections in positioning—common in real-world graphics that we can improve during reconstruction. I'll target approximately 290 pixels for optimal proportions.
Proper layer organization starts immediately with meaningful naming conventions. Double-clicking the ellipse shape in the properties panel reveals timeline properties, where pressing Enter makes the name editable. I'll name this "outer ring" for clarity, then rename the entire layer "rings" to indicate its multi-element nature.
Creating concentric rings efficiently uses duplication rather than recreating from scratch. Highlighting the outer ring and pressing Command+D (Mac) or Control+D (PC) duplicates the shape—note that right-click duplication isn't available for individual shapes, only via keyboard shortcut or Edit menu.
The middle ring requires both size and stroke weight adjustments to match the reference. I'll name it "mid ring" and reduce dimensions to approximately 235 pixels while adjusting stroke weight to 2-3 pixels. Holding Command or Control while scrubbing provides finer numerical control—essential for precision work.
The inner ring follows the same duplication workflow, scaled down further to roughly 185 pixels with increased stroke weight around 5-6 pixels for visual prominence. This duplication method guarantees perfect center alignment between rings—crucial since the Align panel doesn't function within single shape layers.
Understanding shape layer limitations helps optimize workflows. The align panel operates on separate layers, not individual shapes within a layer. By using duplication and scaling, we bypass this limitation while keeping layer counts manageable—important for performance in complex animations.
Converting the outer ring from a complete circle to a partial arc requires the Trim Paths effect—the same tool used for line drawing animations. With the outer ring selected, adding Trim Paths via the Add button affects only that specific shape, demonstrating After Effects' granular control capabilities.
Adjusting Start and End parameters creates the partial ring appearance. I'll set Start around 55% and End around 80% to approximate the reference graphic proportions. The rounded line cap option (second button in stroke settings) eliminates harsh edges for a more polished appearance—subtle details that distinguish professional work.
The rounded caps become more visible with thicker stroke weights, adding visual sophistication to the design. Fine-tuning these parameters while zoomed in ensures optimal results. Use Command/Control while scrubbing for precise adjustments when default increments feel too coarse.
With our foundational ring system complete, we've established the framework for advanced text animation techniques. Each element can be individually animated while maintaining the cohesive visual relationship essential for professional motion graphics. This systematic approach to construction enables the complex animations we'll explore in subsequent lessons.