Hi @ladyunicorn82, that's a good idea, I should make a tutorial for that one day, but I would recommend the fastest way to make one of those would be to get some footage from websites like pexels.com or pixabay.com. When it comes to ambience or asmr, rain seems to be the most popular. And pixabay specifically has free rain sounds. Then combine them together in AE, loop the video for anywhere between 15 min to a few hours and that should do it. Good luck! And thank you so much for watching my tutorial! 😄
Hi @ladyunicorn82, AE is pretty straighforward to use if you already know PS. Think of After Effects as Photoshop that moves, it functions on the same principles, layers with layer modes, transparencies, effects, etc. The only thing is the animation variable which involves keyframes. Start with importing a psd file into after effects and you'll see how it translates quite seamlessly. Hope this helps! 😄
thats awesome man thank you.
Thanks for watching! 😄 really appreciate the support!
very cool thank you
Thanks for watching, I appreciate the support! 😄
Nice 👍
Thank you for watching! 😊
Thank you! 😊
Im trying to create asmr ambience videos in ae but donr have a clue :(
Hi @ladyunicorn82, that's a good idea, I should make a tutorial for that one day, but I would recommend the fastest way to make one of those would be to get some footage from websites like pexels.com or pixabay.com. When it comes to ambience or asmr, rain seems to be the most popular. And pixabay specifically has free rain sounds. Then combine them together in AE, loop the video for anywhere between 15 min to a few hours and that should do it. Good luck! And thank you so much for watching my tutorial! 😄
@@aejustthebasics ive tried but i havw no clue havw fo use AE i used do photomanipulation in ps but i would love to do pics
Hi @ladyunicorn82, AE is pretty straighforward to use if you already know PS. Think of After Effects as Photoshop that moves, it functions on the same principles, layers with layer modes, transparencies, effects, etc. The only thing is the animation variable which involves keyframes. Start with importing a psd file into after effects and you'll see how it translates quite seamlessly. Hope this helps! 😄