Keyframing is an animation technique where you set values at specific points (keyframes) on a timeline to mark changes in attributes like position, scale, opacity, or audio levels. The software interpolates the movement between those points.
Keyframing enables precise control over motion, transitions, and effects in video editing and motion design without advanced VFX. It’s how logos fly in, text fades out, or audio fades sync perfectly. Almost every editing and animation tool relies on keyframing.
Use keyframes to animate objects manually in software like After Effects or Premiere Pro. Set at least two keyframes, start and end, and tweak timing or easing to refine movement.
Plan movements – Place keyframes at logical points for smooth, intentional animation.
Ease in/out – Use interpolation curves for natural-looking transitions instead of linear shifts.
Keep it efficient – Use minimal keyframes necessary to reduce clutter and simplify adjustments.