
At first glance it can seem very daunting, and honestly it's super complex. If you're looking for a quick way to add a bounce to any layer, then this After Effects bounce expression is just for you. And this my friend is where the bounce expression comes into play. This is why it's so important to give your animations weight and mass like objects found in the real world. Motion Design is all about the communication of ideas, and replicating movements found in the real world is an essential part of telling a compelling story.
What if you dropped a basketball and it didn't bounce? You'd probably think something was off, right? Well, the same is true in animation.
^ Reipublicae Romanae Commentariorum (Venice, 1558), noted by Haskell and Penny, 1981.Quickly give your layers organic movement with the Bounce Expression in After Effects. ^ Andrew Runni Anderson, 'Bucephalas and His Legend' The American Journal of Philology 51.1 (1930:1–21). ^ Michael Wood, 'In the footsteps of Alexander the Great'. ^ Rolf Winkes, 'Boukephalas', Miscellanea Mediterranea ( Archaeologia Transatlantica XVIII) Providence 2000, pp. ^ a b Arthur Hugh Clough (editor), John Dryden (translator), Plutarch's 'Lives', vol. Bucephalus, meaning 'Oxhead', so named from the brand-mark on his haunch, was a stallion some four years old. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. ^ The primary (actually secondary) accounts are two: Plutarch's Life of Alexander, 6, and Arrian's Anabasis Alexandri V.19. ^, or Incitatus, Caligula's favourite horse, proclaimed Roman consul. Notes Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Bucephalus.
BTR-4 'Bucephalus', Ukrainian armored troop carrier. HMS Bucephalus, an early 19th-century English naval vessel - see also Invasion of Java (1811).
Bucephalus (trematode), a trematode flatworm genus. Bucephalus (racehorse), an 18th-century Thoroughbred racehorse. Bucephalus (brand), an ox-head branding mark anciently used on horses. Veidt referenced Alexander the Great as someone he idolized as a boy. Veidt's alter ego in the original Watchmen graphic novel was Ozymandias (named after the Greek name for King Ramesses II). In the HBO series Watchmen, the now aged Adrian Veidt's prized horse is a grey horse named Bucephalus, which he rides about on his hidden estate.