As a lead motion designer and creative technologist with over 20 years of international experience, I have witnessed first-hand the persistent technical barriers that limit creativity in professional motion design workflows. Even experienced practitioners spend significant time writing, debugging, and adapting expressions using nulls, sliders, pick whips, and legacy templates. This inefficiency slows production, increases costs, and restricts access to advanced techniques for many talented designers. In response, I developed a visual workflow tool that enables designers to construct complex expressions through an intuitive interface, automatically generating clean, production-ready code. The approach shifts focus from syntax and technical troubleshooting back to creative decision-making and storytelling. This type of practitioner-led innovation is increasingly vital for the UK creative industries. As a global leader in motion design, VFX, and animation, the UK faces intensifying competition from lower-cost regions. Tools that reduce technical friction accelerate iteration, address skills gaps, and strengthen the overall talent pool. By broadening access to advanced techniques, such innovations support higher productivity and maintain the sector’s competitive edge. From a policy perspective, greater support for practitioner-driven solutions - through funding, visibility, and collaborative platforms - could help the UK sustain its position in high-value creative services. The creative industries stand at an inflection point where generative AI is transforming asset creation, yet the demand for precise, controllable, and efficient professional workflows remains undiminished. Practitioner tools that bridge creativity and technology play a key role in amplifying human skill rather than replacing it.
Guilherme Ferraz (Wed,) studied this question.