Adobe After Effects

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Adobe After Effects
After Effects CS3 Icon

After Effects CS3 (8.0) under Windows XP
Developed by Adobe Systems
Latest release CS4 (9.0.1) / 2009-01-05; 90 days ago
Operating system Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows
Type Motion graphics / Visual effects / Animation
License Proprietary
Website Adobe: After Effects

Adobe After Effects is a digital motion graphics and compositing software published by Adobe Systems. Its main purpose is for film and video post-production.

Contents

[edit] Description

Both After Effects and some non-linear editing systems (NLEs) are layer-oriented, meaning that each individual media object (video clip, audio clip, still image, etc.) occupies its own track. In contrast, some NLEs use a system where individual media objects can occupy the same track as long as they do not overlap in time. This track-oriented system is more suited for editing and can keep project files much more concise. The layer-oriented system that After Effects adopts is suited for extensive effects work and keyframing. Although other compositing packages—especially ones that employ tree or node workflows, such as Apple Shake—are better suited to manage large volumes of objects within a composite, After Effects is able to somewhat counter the clutter by selectively hiding layers (using the Shy switch) or by grouping them into pre-compositions. (After Effects does feature a Flowchart panel, which is similar to tree or node graph, but this view of a composition is mostly for display purposes and is not fully functional.)

The main interface consists of several panels (windows in versions prior to After Effects 7.0). Three of the most commonly used panels are the Project panel, the Composition panel, and the Timeline panel. The Project panel acts as a bin to import stills, video, and audio footage items. Footage items in the Project panel are used in the Timeline panel, where layer order and timing can be adjusted. The items visible at the current time marker are displayed in the Composition panel.

After Effects integrates with other Adobe software titles such as Illustrator, Photoshop, Premiere Pro, Encore, and Flash.

[edit] History

After Effects was originally created by the Company of Science and Art in Providence, RI, USA. Version 1.0 was released in January 1993. Version 2.1 introduced PowerPC acceleration in 1994. CoSA along with After Effects was then acquired by Aldus corporation in July 1993; this company was then acquired by Adobe in 1994, and with it PageMaker and After Effects. Adobe's first new release of After Effects was version 3.0.

bundled

Provider Date Version Codename Major features added
CoSA January 1993 1.0 Egg layered compositing with mask, effect, transforms, keyframes; Mac only
May 1993 1.1 more effects
Aldus January 1994 2.0 Teriyaki Time Layout window, multi-machine rendering, frame blending
Adobe October 1995 3.0 Nimchow render queue, time remapping, multiple effects per layer, motion tracker, motion math, Illustrator import, Photoshop as comp import, first Japanese version
April 1996 3.1 file formats, multiprocessing, advanced keying for the "Professional Bundle"
May 1997 3.1 (Windows) Dancing Monkey first Windows version, context menus, first French & German versions
January 1999 4.0 ebeer tabbed windows, multiple masks per layer, adjustment layers, RAM preview, Premiere import; first simultaneous Mac & Windows release
September 1999 4.1 Batnip flowchart view, watch folder, 3D channel effects
April 2001 5.0 Melmet 3D, expressions, 16 bits per channel color
January 7, 2002 5.5 Fauxfu advanced 3D renderer, multiple 3D views, first OS X version
August 2003 6.0 Foodfite paint, scripting, text layers, OpenGL support
May 2004 6.5 Chambant cloning, animation presets, grain management
January 2006 7.0 Clamchop new docking panels UI, 32 bits per channel color (floating point), display color management, dynamic link with Premiere Pro, first Spanish & Italian versions
July 2, 2007 CS3 (8.0) Metaloaf shape layers, puppet tool, brainstorm, clip notes, full color management; first Intel Mac version
January 22, 2008 CS3 (8.0.2) Metaloaf Panasonic P2 support; last Mac Power PC version
September 23, 2008 CS4 (9.0) Chinchillada CUDA enabled, QuickSearch in the project & timeline, Mini-Flowchart, live PS 3D layer import, separate XYZ, Mocha
January 05, 2009 CS4 (9.0.1) Chinchillada RED R3D file support (via RED plugin)

[edit] Plug-ins

After Effects has extensive plug-in support; and a broad range of third party plug-ins are available. A variety of plug-in styles exist, such as particle systems for realistic effects for rain, snow, fire, etc.

Using third-party plug-ins, After Effects can create 3D effects. These sorts of 3D plug-ins use basic 2D layers from After Effects. Illustrator graphics can also be loaded and rendered in 3D using plug-ins such as Zaxwerks 3D Invigorator Pro. Some well-known plug-in vendors are Automatic Duck, BorisFX, Conoa, Cycore Effects, DigiEffects, Digital Anarchy, Digital Film Tools, The Foundry, FXhome, GenArts, GridIron Software, Noise Industries, RE:Vision Effects, Red Giant Software, Synthetic Aperture, Trapcode, Video Copilot, and Zaxwerks.

In addition to 3D effects, there are plug-ins for making video look like film or cartoons; simulating fire, smoke, or water; particle systems; slow motion; creating animated charts, graphs, and other data visualization; calculating the 3D movement of a camera in a 2D video shot; eliminating flicker, noise, or rigging lines; translating timelines from FCP or Avid; adding high-end color correction; and other workflow improvements and visual effects.

[edit] Comparable products

Competitors to After Effects include Autodesk's Combustion, Flame and Inferno; Apple's Shake and Motion; eyeon Fusion; The Foundry's Nuke; Boris RED; Pinnacle Commotion; and the entry-level FXHome. As far as open-source alternatives go, only Jahshaka exists, though its feature set suffers by comparison with that of After Effects.

[edit] External links

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