People often squint slightly when I ask them “have you thought about animating it?”

I think it’s because, in their mind, they immediately imagine animating a video is going to involve a Toy Story-sized budget. But that isn’t the case at all. For starters, the word animation covers a broad spectrum of disciplines in creativity — not just a Disney-level production.

So, what do we mean when we say “animation”? Well, a few things, actually, so I’ll break it down to three simple sections.

Motion Graphics

Motion graphics involve taking your existing assets and, essentially, making them move, building on them or adding them to a scene, or making them into a motion graphic that stands on its own. They are usually text based or asset based (that is, using your logo or corporate branding).

Motion graphics are a really cost-effective way of adding animation to your video as the assets, most of the time, have already been created. An animator can also build on those assets with 2D shapes to help with transitions from scene to scene.

2D/3D Composition

Taking a person filmed in front of a green screen or an existing building model from our specialist software, animators can compose a “live-action” scene. We can make it look like the talent is somewhere they aren’t — like a mine site instead of a studio. Or we can make them interact with motion graphics in, say, an office environment. Whatever you need, this still falls under the title of animation.

There are some examples in this video:

Character Creation

Attaching a character to your brand or story is a smart way to not only have complete control over how you want the narrative to play out but also make your video memorable.

This type of work does take a bit longer because the characters have to be created and then animated. However, the results can be fantastic, as this video demonstrates:

 

If you’d like to use animation in your next video, contact the team at Lush Digital Media. All of the animation used in the videos in this article was created by our talented team and they’d love to work on your next project (unless they get poached to work on Toy Story 4 first, of course). Like what you’ve read? Sign up to the Lush newsletter for fortnightly advice to help you market your business better, tips from our video production team, and a podcast or two from our favourite podcasters, Brand Newsroom. In the meantime, you might enjoy reading these:

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