Book Image

UI Animations with Lottie and After Effects

By : Mireia Alegre Ruiz, Emilio Rodriguez Martinez
Book Image

UI Animations with Lottie and After Effects

By: Mireia Alegre Ruiz, Emilio Rodriguez Martinez

Overview of this book

Lottie is a small and scalable JSON-based animation file. LottieFiles is the platform where Lottie animations can be uploaded, tested, and shared. By combining the LottieFiles plugin and the LottieFiles platform, you’ll be able to create stunning animations that are easy to integrate in any device. You’ll also see how to use the Bodymovin plugin in After Effects to export your animation to a JSON file. The book starts by giving you an overview of Lottie and LottieFiles. As you keep reading, you’ll understand the entire Lottie ecosystem and get hands-on with classic 2D animation principles. You’ll also get a step-by-step guided tour to ideate, sketch for storytelling, design an icon that will fulfill the needs and expectations of users based on UX, and finally animate it in Adobe After Effects. This will help you get familiar with the After Effects environment, work with vector shape layers, create and modify keyframes using layer properties, explore path and mask features, and adjust timing easily to create professional-looking animations. By the end of this animation book, you’ll be able to create and export your own Lottie animations using After Effects and implement them in mobile apps using React Native. You’ll also have an understanding of 2D animation best practices and principles that you can apply in your own projects.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Part 1 - Building a Foundation With After Effects and LottieFiles
5
Part 2 - Cracking Lottie Animations
9
Part 3 - Adding Your Lottie Animations Into Mobile Apps

Drawing our icon

We know that in these last sections we've been going through so much history and theory. You've learned lots of new words and concepts, but it is very important to us that you first learn the foundation of classic animation before starting to jump into tools to animate. Because tools are just that... tools. Of course, they are fantastic and will save us loads of time and effort, but first, we need to plan our animation in our head to get it out! So, go grab a piece of paper and a pencil and start having some fun!

So, let's imagine we are already animators; of course, we are! And we just had a meeting with our client. Let's say our client sells T-shirts through their own app; however, when payments are done, nothing comes up on the screen, so users keep getting confused as they are not sure whether the purchase has been successfully made, and it's using up a lot of customer care resources.

So, what do you think will be the best solution...