
You’ll want to increase the mesh precision to regain the balls’ original round shape. When installed, you won’t find Newton 3 under Effects or Scripts, but instead under the Composition menu within the menu toolbar. However, there are likely to be moments that specifically call to the instructions of the video tutorial. I understand it’s not always practical to watch a tutorial, therefore, you can find the written transcript below, with GIF examples. Therefore, I invite you to watch the ten-minute tutorial below, which should be sufficient enough to get you started with Newton 3. Plus, an all-in tutorial would likely be 2+ hours in length. Because, while the plugin has a simple, elegant design, it can become complex in its use. This is going to be a truly basic tutorial geared toward teaching you to crawl rather than helping you hit the ground running. Instead, I’ll present a ten-minute tutorial that covers the core principles of the plugin. Ok, I’ll stop there with the Newton-related puns. You know, like an apple falling from a tree. Newton - a 2D physics simulator plugin for After Effects - makes text, shapes, and masks behave like real-world objects that have been dropped. The plugin makes text, shapes, and masks behave like real-world objects. Newton is a 2D physics simulator plugin for After Effects.
