Adobe Creative Cloud After Effects



Looking for a lift from your marketing dollars? Display advertising is a great way to increase brand awareness and improve conversion rates across other marketing channels.

With display advertising, you can serve up ads to people who have visited your website. This is a super effective way to drive them back to your website where they will hopefully make a purchase or convert to a customer.

We’re all used to seeing display ads when we surf the web, and as a marketer, I’m always on the lookout for great ads that capture my attention. Weather.com is one of my favorite places to go to see what ad creative competitors in our space and my favorite brands are serving up 🙂

One trend that I wanted to try was the use of animation in display ads, similar to this:

I wanted to do something a bit more subtle. Something that would capture attention without being too over-the-top or annoying.

I want to break down how I got there, but here’s my final product:

To date, we’ve seen some impressive click-through rates. So, as promised, here’s how I did it with Adobe Creative Cloud by my side, and how you can too.

In the past, we’ve leaned on images of our app in our display ads. I wanted to run a test using our team to add bit of personality and set us apart from our competitors featuring what we’re best known for: Legendary customer service and support.

I love using emojis in our email marketing efforts, and see good open rates when incorporating them in the subject line, so I had emojis on my mind. I wanted them to float across the page, similar to how reactions come across a Facebook live video.

Adobe Creative Cloud After Effects

I start with Illustrator and create a layout with my background, orange CTA bar, and picture of my team.

Learn Adobe Creative Cloud After Effects. Learn. Creative Cloud. After Effects. It will help us improve the performance of our website and those of our partners who use the Adobe Experience Cloud.

Then, I optimize my illustrator file for After Effects by selecting my top layer, and choosing “Release to Layers (Sequence)” from the layers menu.

This ensures that when I import into After Effects, I can manipulate each layer individually without copying and pasting each layer individually. So, for instance, if I wanted to add an animation to our logo, the team pic, or to the Free Demo CTA, I can easily select those layers in After Effects.

Here’s a quick and simple video detailing that process – super useful if you find yourself going from Illustrator to After Effects frequently:

Now, over to Adobe After Effects, I create a new composition that is the same size as my display ad, in this case 300×250.

I want to add my Illustrator file to the composition, so I simply go to File > Import > File… and choose my Illustrator file.

Once my Illustrator file is added, I drag it down to my new composition.

Now, it’s time to sprinkle in my emojis. I simply saved a few emoji images I thought best embodied our support team as .pngs from Emojipedia.

This is an excellent resource if you’re hunting down emojis for basically any platform – email, facebook, twitter, etc.

Then, I import my emojis to After Effects as well and add them to my composition, simply using File > Import > Multiple Files…

Now all of my Illustrator layers and emoji .png files are in my composition and ready to animate!

This is the fun part! I’m nowhere close to being an After Effects expert, so I won’t go into detail around how I did the animations, but I will share a couple awesome resources I used.

First, if you’re new to Adobe After Effects, there is a bit of a learning curve.

This tutorial was perfect for learning After Effects basics for simple animation:

For the display ad animation, I wanted to have my emojis travel along a path across the screen. Here’s the tutorial I used to figure out how to get an object to animate along a custom path:

Basically, you use the shape tool to create a custom path, copy the path, and paste it into the Position keyframe.

Then, you can adjust the path for each element (emoji in my case) to get a cadence you like.

This part took a bit of tweaking. I started out with 10 emojis, but in the end only 4 of them made the cut. I also moved the animation paths around and adjusted my position keyframes to get a result I was happy with.

The fun part is complete, now I have to get my animation into a format I can upload for my display ads.

Easy, right?

Actually, no, not for me.

My first instinct was to export the video as an .mp4 using the Adobe Media Encoder Queue. Then, I imported the .mp4 into Photoshop, and exported that file as a .gif.

Here’s where I ran into a couple of hurdles:

  1. Quality: I struggled getting a quality image in the resulting .gif. The solid colors and emojis looked okay, but I kept getting a grainy team photo that looked less than crisp and professional.
  2. File Size: My .gif was way too large to upload as a display ad.

Back to the drawing board.

After a bit of research, I found a better solution for increasing quality while decreasing file size.

The new plan was to render the animation as a series of .png files to import into photoshop, rather than the .mp4.

Reducing File Size

First, I went back to my composition and reduced the frame rate from the default of 30 frames per second to 24 frames per second with the goal of cutting down the number of frames/.png images, and therefore file size. Since the animation is fairly simple, I’m not worried about losing much quality here.

Spoiler alert: After I exported, this still wasn’t enough to get my file size small enough.

So I made another adjustment – shortening my animation altogether.

Originally, my animation was 10 seconds long, with the emojis traveling all the way across the frame and disappearing on the other side.

To get file size down, I shortened the animation to 4 seconds. I had to improvise a bit, and stop the emojis from traveling about half way across the frame. This actually worked out well, since I didn’t want to loop the animation, the emojis would stay on the ad even after the animation ran out.

AdobeCloud

Creating .png Sequence

Now, I’m ready to render my .png sequence so I can open it with Photoshop and create a timeline.

Still in After Effects, I go to Composition > Add to Render Queue.

In the Render Queue, I see my composition, named “Comp 1.” Right now, the Output Module is Lossless. I want to change that, so I click on it.

In the Output Module Settings, I choose PNG Sequence as the format.

Then, I’m good to hit the “Render” button. What I end up with is a series of .pngs that make up my animation in my destination folder.

Now, I’m ready to import into Photoshop.

Adobe After Effects Included In Creative Cloud

In Photoshop, I go to open a new file. I go to my .png sequence destination folder, and select the first image of my sequence. I also check the “Image Sequence” box so Photoshop knows it’s a sequence and to import every image in the folder.

Before my sequence opens, Photoshop asks for my frame rate (defaulted at 30 fps). I just change this to 24 to match the settings of my After Effects composition.

Viola. Here’s my timeline, ready to go. I can hit my spacebar (or click play) to preview my animation.

Effect

Export as .gif from Photoshop

Now, I’m ready to export. I go to File > Export > Save for Web (Legacy).

I choose GIF as the file output type and 256 colors. I also set the Looping Option to “Once” rather than “Forever.”

Now I can save, and my cheerful .gif animated banner ad is ready for display across the web!

Creative Cloud and Creative Suite 6 apps installer size

Application name

Operating system

Installer size

Acrobat XI Pro

Mac OS

585.06 MB

Windows 32 bit

497.71 MB

After Effects CS6

Windows 64 bit

997.28 MB

Mac OS

1.29 GB

After Effects

Mac OS

1.33 GB

Windows 64 bit

1.14 GB

After Effects CC (2014)

Mac OS

1 GB

Windows 64 bit

950.84 MB

After Effects CC (2015)

Windows 64 bit

1.33 GB

Audition CC (2014)

Windows 64 bit

292.99 MB

Mac OS

307.77 MB

Audition CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

222.8 MB

Windows 64 bit

326.8 MB

Audition CS6

Windows 32 bit

222.81 MB

Mac OS

386.99 MB

Bridge

Mac OS

369.82 MB

Windows 64 bit

348.72 MB

Windows 32 bit

313.93 MB

Bridge CC v6.1.1.10

Windows 32 bit

321.5 MB

Windows 64 bit

357.1 MB

Dreamweaver

Mac OS

314.63 MB

Windows 32 bit

324.43 MB

Dreamweaver CC (2014)

Windows 32 bit

320.02 MB

Mac OS

302.73 MB

Dreamweaver CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

337.6 MB

Windows 64 bit

337.6 MB

Dreamweaver CS6

Mac OS

414.18 MB

Windows 32 bit

278.75 MB

Exchange Panel (for CS6 apps)

Mac OS

89.24 MB

Windows 32 bit

78.61 MB

Extension Manager CC

Windows 32 bit

107.56 MB

Mac OS

103.35 MB

Extendscript Toolkit CC

Mac OS

95.8 MB

Windows 32 bit

93.93 MB

ExtendScript Toolkit CC V4.0.0.1

Windows 32 bit

93.9 MB

Windows 64 bit

93.9 MB

Fireworks CS6

Windows 32 bit

450.58 MB

Mac OS

636.76 MB

Fireworks CS6 v12.0.1.274

Windows 32 bit

437.7 MB

Windows 64 bit

437.7 MB

Flash Builder Premium

Mac OS

1.06 GB

Windows 64 bit

1012.31 MB

Windows 32 bit

1005.85 MB

Flash Builder Premium v4.7

Windows 32 bit

1.0 GB

Windows 64 bit

1.0 GB

Flash Professional CS6 and Mobile Device Packaging

Windows 32 bit

1.14 GB

Mac OS

1.38 GB

Flash Professional CC and Mobile Device Packaging

Windows 64 bit

922.35 MB

Mac OS

1008.46 MB

Flash Professional CC and Mobile Device Packaging (2014)

Mac OS

821.53 MB

Windows 64 bit

754.83 MB

Flash Professional CC v2015.0

Windows 32 bit

1.1 GB

Windows 64 bit

876 MB

Gaming SDK 1.2

Mac OS

284.36 MB

Windows 32 bit

270.24 MB

Gaming SDK 1.3

Mac OS

281.27 MB

Windows 32 bit

265.66 MB

Gaming SDK v1.4

Windows 32 bit

295.5 MB

Windows 64 bit

295.5 MB

Illustrator

Windows 32 bit

1.76 GB

Mac OS

1.75 GB

Illustrator CC (2014)

Mac OS

1.64 GB

Windows 32 bit

1.53 GB

Windows 64 bit

1.57 GB

Illustrator CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

1.7 GB

Windows 64 bit

1.75 GB

Illustrator CS6

Mac OS

1.2 GB

Windows 32 bit

2.85 GB

InCopy

Windows 32 bit

951.51 MB

Mac OS

628.06 MB

InCopy CC (2014)

Mac OS

497.26 MB

Windows 32 bit

420.2 MB

Windows 64 bit

446.06 MB

InCopy CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

464.6 MB

Windows 64 bit

499.82 MB

InCopy CS6

Mac OS

953.19 MB

Windows 32 bit

637.91 MB

InDesign

Windows 32 bit

1.15 GB

Mac OS

853.81 MB

InDesign CC (2014)

Windows 32 bit

428.04 MB

Windows 64 bit

454.58 MB

Mac OS

512.9 MB

InDesign CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

471.1 MB

Windows 64 bit

507.1 MB

InDesign CS6

Mac OS

1.22 GB

Windows 32 bit

878.55 MB

Lightroom 4

Mac OS

487.93 MB

Windows 32 bit

837.23 MB

Lightroom 5

Mac OS

505.68 MB

Windows 32 bit

438.74 MB

Windows 64 bit

458.54 MB

Photoshop Lightroom 2015.1

Windows 32 bit

471.7 MB

Windows 64 bit

761.9 MB

Media Encoder CC (2014)

Mac OS

689.03 MB

Windows 64 bit

555.14 MB

Media Encoder CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

Comes bundled with other apps

Windows 64 bit

538.8 MB

Muse CC

Windows 32 bit

62.17 MB

Mac OS

191.4 MB

Muse CC (2014)

Mac OS

168.75 MB

Windows 64 bit

94.08 MB

Muse CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

62.2 MB

Windows 64 bit

205.4 MB

Photoshop CS6

Mac OS

1.02 GB

Windows 32 bit

1.13 GB

Photoshop

Windows 32 bit

1.26 GB

Mac OS

880.69 MB

Photoshop CC (2014)

Windows 32 bit

676.74 MB

Mac OS

800.63 MB

Windows 64 bit

739.62 MB

Photoshop CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

710 MB

Windows 64 bit

815.7 MB

Prelude

Mac OS

619.96 MB

Windows 64 bit

599.24 MB

Prelude CC (2014)

Mac OS

517.72 MB

Windows 64 bit

511.54 MB

Prelude CC (2015)

Windows 32 bit

NA

Windows 64 bit

393.5 MB

Prelude CS6

Windows 32 bit

487.82 MB

Mac OS

712.28 MB

Premiere Pro CS6

Windows 32 bit

1.1 GB

Mac OS

1.62 GB

Premiere Pro

Mac OS

1.18 GB

Windows 64 bit

1.01 GB

Premiere Pro CC (2014)

Windows 64 bit

913.89 MB

Mac OS

1.03 GB

Premiere Pro CC (2015)

Windows 64 bit

817.2 MB

Scout CC

Mac OS

12.62 MB

Windows 64 bit

16.91 MB

SpeedGrade CC

Mac OS

154.55 MB

Windows 64 bit

126.44 MB

SpeedGrade CC (2014)

Windows 64 bit

341.2 MB

Mac OS

371.12 MB

SpeedGrade CC (2015)

Windows 64 bit

347.4 MB

SpeedGrade CS6

Windows 64 bit

95.14 MB

Mac OS

184.78 MB

Touch App plug-ins

Mac OS

7.58 MB

Windows 32 bit

3.86 MB

Adobe Creative Cloud Free Trial

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