
Motion With Manners: Animation That Supports the Story
Learn how to design motion with manners, using Framer animation to guide the story, confirm actions, and respect the reader’s pace.
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1 min read
Motion has manners when it respects the person reading the page. It does not barge into the conversation or demand applause for every transition. Instead, it makes the story easier to follow by guiding attention at the right moments. Framer’s animation tools are powerful, so courtesy becomes a design decision.
Animation Should Be Courteous
Use movement to explain relationships. A drawer should feel connected to the button that opened it, a card hover should confirm interactivity, and a section reveal should help the visitor understand progression. When motion answers a question, it earns its place. When it merely interrupts, it weakens the page.
Use Movement to Explain
Pace matters because people read at different speeds. Long delays can make a site feel sluggish, while constant movement can make it difficult to focus. Keep animation distances modest and repeat patterns consistently. The visitor should feel oriented, not managed.
Respect the Reader’s Pace
A story-first page can still feel lively. Motion adds warmth, rhythm, and clarity when it follows the content instead of competing with it. Test every animation by asking what would be lost if it disappeared. If the answer is nothing, the mannerly choice is to remove it.
A Story First, Effects Second
Mannerly motion helps a page feel considered rather than busy. It explains, confirms, and guides without making visitors wait for the design to finish performing. Framer’s motion tools are most effective when creators test them against the story instead of the effect menu. If movement makes the message clearer, it belongs.
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