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Kinetic Text in After Effects

Intermediate · ~75 min

Overview

Kinetic typography — text that moves in sync with audio or on its own — is one of the most in-demand motion skills. This guide builds a polished lower-third animation from scratch.

What You Need

  • Adobe After Effects (trial or subscription)
  • A geometric sans-serif font installed — Syne, Montserrat, or similar
  • Optionally: an audio file to animate against

Steps

1

Create a new composition

1920×1080px, 24fps, 10 seconds long. This is your working canvas. Name it — "Lower Third v1" is better than "Comp 1" when you have 40 of them open.

2

Create your text layer

Select the Type tool → click the canvas → type your text. Set font, size, and colour in the Character panel. For sharp-edged text at small sizes, set Anti-Alias to None.

3

Set your anchor point

Press Y for the Pan Behind tool. Move the anchor point to where you want the animation to originate — bottom-left for a slide-in from bottom-left, centre for a scale-up.

4

Add position keyframes

At frame 0, move the text off-screen. At frame 15, place it at its final resting position. Press P to reveal Position, click the stopwatch to set the first keyframe, move to frame 15, and drag the text into place.

5

Apply Easy Ease and shape the curve

Select both keyframes → right-click → Keyframe Assistant → Easy Ease. Open the Graph Editor (the graph icon in the timeline). Pull the velocity curve into a steep S-shape: fast at the start, decelerating hard into the end position.

6

Add an overshoot for a spring feel

Duplicate the end keyframe and move it 3 frames earlier. Nudge its position slightly past the final point. The last keyframe snaps it back. This 3-frame overshoot gives a natural spring-like settle that feels alive.

Pro Tips

  • Use the same easing curve across all animated elements. Consistency is what makes motion feel designed rather than accidental.
  • Animate one axis at a time when learning — horizontal or vertical, not diagonal. Diagonal moves are harder to control.
  • Step through the animation frame by frame (right arrow key). Timing problems are invisible at full playback speed.