| After Effects CS4 |
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Kerning and trackingKerning is
the process of adding or subtracting space between specific letter pairs. Tracking is
the process of creating an equal amount of spacing across a range
of letters. Positive kerning or tracking values move characters
apart (increasing the spacing from the default); negative values
move characters closer together (reducing the spacing from the default).
Note: When you open a project that
was last saved in After Effects 6.0, text in the project may lie
differently than in After Effects 6.0 because of improvements in kerning
behavior.
You can automatically kern type using metrics kerning or optical kerning. Metrics kerning uses kern pairs, which are included with most fonts. Kern pairs contain information about the spacing of specific pairs of letters such as LA, To, Tr, Ta, Tu, Te, Ty, Wa, WA, We, Wo, Ya, and Yo. After Effects uses metrics kerning by default so that specific pairs are automatically kerned when you import or type text. Some fonts include robust kern-pair specifications. For fonts for which metrics kerning provides inadequate results, or for two different typefaces or sizes in a line, you may want to use the optical kerning option. Optical kerning adjusts the spacing between adjacent characters based on their shapes. You can also use manual kerning to adjust the space between two letters. Tracking
and manual kerning are cumulative, so you can first adjust individual pairs
of letters and then tighten or loosen a block of text without affecting
the relative kerning of the letter pairs.
Note: Values for kerning
and tracking affect Japanese text, but normally these options are
used to adjust the aki (spacing) between Roman characters.
Alan Shisko provides a blog post and video tutorial on kerning: www.adobe.com/go/learn_ae_alankerning. ![]() Tracking set to default value of 0 (left), Tracking set to
-50 (center), and Tracking set to 200 (right) |