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How Do I Rotate a Workspace in After Effects?

Published in After Effects 2 mins read

The Rotation tool in After Effects isn't used to rotate the workspace (the entire interface). Instead, you rotate layers, objects, or the camera within the composition. Here's how:

Rotating Layers or Objects:

  1. Select the Layer: Choose the layer you want to rotate in the Timeline panel.
  2. Access the Rotation Property: In the Timeline panel, twirl down the layer to reveal its properties: Transform > Rotation.
  3. Adjust the Rotation Value: You can rotate the layer by:
    • Entering a Value: Type a degree value directly into the Rotation property field. Positive values rotate clockwise; negative values rotate counter-clockwise.
    • Using the Rotation Tool: Select the Rotation tool from the toolbar (shortcut: W). A circular icon with a crosshair will appear on your selected layer in the Composition panel. Click and drag on the icon to rotate the layer.
  4. Adjust the Anchor Point (if needed): The layer rotates around its anchor point. If you want it to rotate around a different point, use the Pan Behind (Anchor Point) tool (shortcut: Y) to reposition the anchor point before rotating.

Rotating the Camera:

If you have a camera layer in your composition, you can rotate the camera to change the viewpoint:

  1. Ensure You Have a Camera: Create a camera layer (Layer > New > Camera). Make sure your layers are 3D layers (toggle the 3D layer switch).
  2. Access Camera Transform Properties: In the Timeline panel, select the camera layer, then open the properties: Transform.
  3. Modify Orientation or Rotation:
    • Orientation: Rotates the camera relative to its current position. Often, this is the property you will want to use.
    • Rotation: Rotates the camera in absolute world space.

Important Considerations:

  • Workspace vs. Composition: Remember, After Effects doesn't let you directly rotate the entire workspace/interface. You're adjusting the elements within your composition.
  • Animating Rotation: You can animate the Rotation property to create rotating effects over time. Set keyframes at different points in the timeline with different rotation values.
  • 3D Layers: For more complex rotations and perspective changes, make sure your layers are 3D layers by enabling the 3D layer switch (a small cube icon) in the Timeline panel.
  • Pre-Composing: If you need to rotate a group of layers together, pre-compose them first (Layer > Pre-compose). Then, you can rotate the pre-comp layer.

In summary, use the Rotation tool or the Rotation property in the Timeline to rotate layers, objects, or cameras within your After Effects composition, not the workspace itself.