These fantastic video effects, all attainable in After Effects and Premiere Pro, will grab attention. There is no simple way to become a video editor; success will need a lot of effort, hard work, and patience over time. There are a few simple victories that you may be ignoring.

The fantastic video effects on this list are commonplace in today’s music videos, television shows, and big-budget films. Even yet, with the most excellent video editings tools like After Effects and Premiere Pro, they’re easier to do than you would imagine. These tutorials will guide you through each of these fascinating video effects step by step, so you’ll be adding strobe flicker effect, infinite zoom, reverse videos , glowing footsteps, and more to your video projects in no time.

1. Strobe flicker effect

The strobe-style flicker is one of those amazing visual effects you often see in current music videos, often at the time when a beat drops, even though it requires a clear warning for those with epilepsy beforehand. There are other ways to accomplish this look with Premiere Pro, but the method described in this video by Steven Van is one of the simplest. The entire video is only four minutes long, demonstrating how simple this approach is.

2. Glowing footsteps

Another exciting and eye-catching approach you’ll see in many music videos right now is glowing footsteps. Ignace Aleya, a VFX artist, explains how to make them in this 17-minute video. His method involves using Mocha, an After Effects tracking plugin, and he’s graciously shared all of the files he uses in the lesson to make it easy to follow at home.

3. Infinite zoom

Infinite Zoom is another one of our favorite amazing video effects. Cinecom.net’s 8-minute video lesson takes inspiration from the opening credits of the 2011 film Limitless and demonstrates how to get a similar appearance with After Effects. To make it appear as if the camera is always moving ahead, you mix numerous pictures and animate them. It’s a simplified form of the approach, but it quickly and effectively conveys the main notion.

4. Clone yourself

Interacting with oneself on camera seems like one of those fantastic visual effects that only movies with billion-dollar budgets could afford. But it’s relatively simple to accomplish with After Effects. Jordan from Motion Array demonstrates how to toss and catch a ball with your clone in this 23-minute video. You should be able to construct a convincing scenario of your interaction with your digital clone if you keep your framing the same for each take and repeat the scene a significant number of times.

5. Bend water

Bending water, seemingly by the power of your mind, is one of those cool video effects you’d only expect to see in a big-budget movie like Avatar: The Last Airbender. But as this 13 minute tutorial from Production Crate shows, you can create it yourself in After Effects, and you should have a whole heap of fun doing so. The team walks you through everything from shooting with a water wand to different ways to create your displacement maps, and you can even download free visual and audio assets for your projects.

6. Aura/energy field

Auras are a fascinating video effect that has become a hallmark of current science fiction and fantasy films. And Robot Underdog teaches you how to make them in this 28-minute video. Using After Effects and a variety of plugins and supplied assets, you’ll build an effect based on a scene from Dragon Ball Z: Light of Hope. This is one of our more time-consuming lessons, but the ultimate product will be well worth your time and work.

7. Bullet-time

One of the most famous special effects of all time, ‘bullet time’ gives the impression of detaching the time and space of a camera from those of its visible subject. It first appeared in the Matrix movies when Neo leaned back as bullets floated around him in slow motion. This eight-minute video by Premiere Gal shows you how to create this kind of 360 views using just one camera and Premiere Pro. She walks you through the entire process, from filming herself jumping off a trumpet to the final post-processing of the scene, and the results are surprisingly eye-catching.

I hope you like the post on the best effect you can use in your videos to make them creative. If you want to edit videos on Android, you can see these best video editing apps for Android