Intermediate / Video / 10-18 min
Keyframing 101: animating position, scale, opacity
Create controlled motion for punch-ins, text reveals, and simple visual emphasis.
TL;DR
Use this lesson to create controlled motion for punch-ins, text reveals, and simple visual emphasis. Treat it as practical guidance, not a rigid rulebook.
Why it matters
Manual editing is still the control layer for pacing, context, captions, sound, and final polish. The goal is to help you make a stronger clip without taking away your creative freedom.
What you will learn
Prerequisites
- A source video
- Any timeline editor such as CapCut, Resolve, Premiere, Final Cut, Descript, or VN
What you need
Core concept
A manual editing lesson should improve the clip's story, clarity, or polish. If the technique does not make the clip easier to watch, skip it.
Example
Scenario
A promising clip feels watchable but still has one visible editing problem.
Move
Apply the technique on a duplicate timeline so you can compare the original and revised version.
Result
Keep the edit only if the revised version is clearer, tighter, or easier to watch on a phone.
How to do it
- 1Pick one property to animate first: position, scale, or opacity.
- 2Set the start keyframe where the viewer should begin looking and the end keyframe where attention should land.
- 3Use easing when available so the motion starts and stops naturally.
- 4Preview the motion at full speed and reduce movement if it pulls attention away from the speaker.
- 5Reuse the keyframe pattern only when the clip needs the same emphasis again.
Expected output
A before/after edit where keyframing 101: animating position, scale, opacity visibly improves clarity, pacing, framing, audio, or export readiness.
Practice task
Apply the technique to a duplicate edit
- 1Duplicate a real clip timeline before making changes.
- 2Apply the lesson technique to the duplicate version only.
- 3Watch original and revised versions back to back on a phone and keep the better one.