BREAKING DOWN MOTION
BREAKING DOWN MOTION
Teaching complex motion and visual design for clear, practical understanding that anyone can apply.
Insights

Where it started
I started teaching motion by creating a new Instagram page, @feat.anmol_, with a simple idea in mind - document what I was learning and break it down in a way that actually made sense. At that point, it wasn’t about building an audience or growing a page. It was about clarity. I wanted a space where I could take what I knew about motion and visual design, simplify it, and present it in a way that didn’t feel overwhelming. The page became that space. A place to turn complex ideas into something structured and understandable.
what the page is really about
@feat.anmol_ is not a page for showcasing finished work. It’s a page built around process. Every post focuses on tutorials, breakdowns, and explanations that go beyond just “how to do this.” The intention is to show the thinking behind the work, the decisions, the structure, the logic that actually builds good motion. Instead of just giving steps, the goal is to build understanding. Because once you understand the why, you’re not dependent on tutorials anymore.

why i chose to teach
While learning motion, I realized that most content available either skipped steps or skipped thinking. It made things look easy, but not clear. That gap is what pushed me to start explaining things myself. Teaching became a way to simplify what I knew and make it more accessible. But more importantly, it became a way to refine my own understanding. Because if you can explain something clearly, you actually understand it. And if you can’t, you’re still guessing.

Growth and Validation
In just three months, the page grew to over half a million views per month. But what stood out wasn’t just the numbers - it was how people responded. Messages, comments, and conversations showed that people weren’t just watching, they were learning. They were applying the breakdowns, asking better questions, and engaging with the process. That was the real validation. It proved that there is space for content that prioritizes clarity over aesthetics and depth over speed.
BREAKING DOWN MOTION
BREAKING DOWN MOTION
Teaching complex motion and visual design for clear, practical understanding that anyone can apply.
Insights

Where it started
I started teaching motion by creating a new Instagram page, @feat.anmol_, with a simple idea in mind - document what I was learning and break it down in a way that actually made sense. At that point, it wasn’t about building an audience or growing a page. It was about clarity. I wanted a space where I could take what I knew about motion and visual design, simplify it, and present it in a way that didn’t feel overwhelming. The page became that space. A place to turn complex ideas into something structured and understandable.
what the page is really about
@feat.anmol_ is not a page for showcasing finished work. It’s a page built around process. Every post focuses on tutorials, breakdowns, and explanations that go beyond just “how to do this.” The intention is to show the thinking behind the work, the decisions, the structure, the logic that actually builds good motion. Instead of just giving steps, the goal is to build understanding. Because once you understand the why, you’re not dependent on tutorials anymore.

why i chose to teach
While learning motion, I realized that most content available either skipped steps or skipped thinking. It made things look easy, but not clear. That gap is what pushed me to start explaining things myself. Teaching became a way to simplify what I knew and make it more accessible. But more importantly, it became a way to refine my own understanding. Because if you can explain something clearly, you actually understand it. And if you can’t, you’re still guessing.

Growth and Validation
In just three months, the page grew to over half a million views per month. But what stood out wasn’t just the numbers - it was how people responded. Messages, comments, and conversations showed that people weren’t just watching, they were learning. They were applying the breakdowns, asking better questions, and engaging with the process. That was the real validation. It proved that there is space for content that prioritizes clarity over aesthetics and depth over speed.
BREAKING DOWN MOTION
BREAKING DOWN MOTION
Teaching complex motion and visual design for clear, practical understanding that anyone can apply.
Insights

Where it started
I started teaching motion by creating a new Instagram page, @feat.anmol_, with a simple idea in mind - document what I was learning and break it down in a way that actually made sense. At that point, it wasn’t about building an audience or growing a page. It was about clarity. I wanted a space where I could take what I knew about motion and visual design, simplify it, and present it in a way that didn’t feel overwhelming. The page became that space. A place to turn complex ideas into something structured and understandable.
what the page is really about
@feat.anmol_ is not a page for showcasing finished work. It’s a page built around process. Every post focuses on tutorials, breakdowns, and explanations that go beyond just “how to do this.” The intention is to show the thinking behind the work, the decisions, the structure, the logic that actually builds good motion. Instead of just giving steps, the goal is to build understanding. Because once you understand the why, you’re not dependent on tutorials anymore.

why i chose to teach
While learning motion, I realized that most content available either skipped steps or skipped thinking. It made things look easy, but not clear. That gap is what pushed me to start explaining things myself. Teaching became a way to simplify what I knew and make it more accessible. But more importantly, it became a way to refine my own understanding. Because if you can explain something clearly, you actually understand it. And if you can’t, you’re still guessing.

Growth and Validation
In just three months, the page grew to over half a million views per month. But what stood out wasn’t just the numbers - it was how people responded. Messages, comments, and conversations showed that people weren’t just watching, they were learning. They were applying the breakdowns, asking better questions, and engaging with the process. That was the real validation. It proved that there is space for content that prioritizes clarity over aesthetics and depth over speed.
