The Complete Guide to Preparing Your Logo for Animation

Logo Design Preparation

You've decided to animate your logo—excellent choice. But before the animation magic begins, proper file preparation is crucial. A well-organized logo file can save hours of work, prevent quality issues, and unlock creative possibilities that poorly-prepared files can't access.

This guide walks you through everything animators need, what makes a logo animation-ready, and how to deliver files that result in flawless results.

Why Preparation Matters

Think of your logo file like cooking ingredients. You can make a meal with random items thrown together, but a professional chef needs properly prepped, organized ingredients to create something exceptional.

Poorly prepared logos force animators to spend time cleaning up files instead of crafting beautiful motion. Worse, some animation techniques simply won't work with flattened or improperly structured logos.

Real Example: A client once sent a logo as a flattened JPG. Recreating it as vectors took 3 hours before animation could even begin. A proper vector file would have been animation-ready in minutes.

File Format Requirements

Primary Format: Vector Files

Vectors are non-negotiable for professional logo animation. They scale infinitely without quality loss and allow precise control over individual elements.

Acceptable vector formats (in order of preference):

  1. AI (Adobe Illustrator): Best option. Preserves layers, effects, and full editability.
  2. SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics): Excellent for web-based animations. Keep layers separated if possible.
  3. EPS (Encapsulated PostScript): Widely compatible. Works well if properly structured.
  4. PDF (Vector PDF): Acceptable but verify it's vector, not rasterized.
Critical: Don't send PNG or JPG for animation. These raster formats don't contain the vector data needed for quality animation. If you only have PNG/JPG, we can vectorize it—but this adds time and cost.

Supporting Files (Helpful but Optional)

Layer Organization: The Critical Factor

This is where most logo files fall short. Animators need individual elements separated onto their own layers—not everything merged into one.

Ideal Layer Structure

For a hypothetical "CloudFlow" logo with text and icon:

Layer 1: Icon - Cloud Shape (separate from other elements)
Layer 2: Icon - Flow Lines (separate paths)
Layer 3: Wordmark - "Cloud" (separate from "Flow")
Layer 4: Wordmark - "Flow" (separate from "Cloud")
Layer 5: Tagline (if applicable)

Bad Layer Structure (Avoid These)

Pro Tip: If you're unsure about layer structure, provide both a fully layered version AND a flattened reference version. This gives animators flexibility while ensuring nothing gets lost.

Text Handling: Outlined vs. Live Type

This is a common question with no perfect answer—it depends on the animation approach.

Option 1: Live/Editable Text (Preferred for Simple Animations)

Advantages:

Requirements:

Option 2: Outlined/Converted Text (Needed for Complex Effects)

Advantages:

Process in Illustrator:

  1. Select text
  2. Type → Create Outlines (or Cmd/Ctrl + Shift + O)
  3. Keep a copy with live text for reference
Best Practice: Send BOTH versions. Live text on one artboard, outlined text on another. This gives animators maximum flexibility.

Color Considerations

Color Mode: RGB vs. CMYK

For animation (which is digital/screen-based), always use RGB color mode. CMYK is for print and can cause unexpected color shifts when animated.

How to check/convert in Illustrator:

Provide Exact Color Values

Don't make animators guess. Include:

Gradients and Special Effects

If your logo includes gradients, glows, shadows, or other effects:

Size and Proportion Guidelines

Artboard Size

Create your logo at a large, scalable size:

Larger is always better with vectors—there's no quality penalty and it future-proofs the file.

Padding/Safe Area

Leave adequate space around your logo within the artboard. Animation elements often extend beyond the logo itself (particles, glows, motion paths), so breathing room is helpful.

Rule of thumb: Include 20-30% padding around all edges.

Design Choices That Impact Animation

Logos That Animate Beautifully

Logos That Complicate Animation

Note: These aren't dealbreakers—skilled animators can work with any logo. But simpler, cleaner designs offer more creative animation possibilities.

Pre-Submission Checklist

Before sending your logo file to an animator, verify:

File is vector format (AI, SVG, EPS, or PDF)
Elements separated onto individual layers
Color mode set to RGB (not CMYK)
Text either outlined OR font files included
No unnecessary hidden layers or guides
Effects are live (not rasterized)
Artboard at least 1000px on longest side
Brand colors documented (HEX/RGB codes)
File tested (opens correctly in Illustrator/After Effects)

Common File Preparation Mistakes

1. Sending Only a PNG/JPG

The most common error. Raster files can be vectorized but it adds time and may not perfectly match the original.

2. Embedded Images Instead of Vectors

Some logos contain embedded raster images (photos, textures) that look vector but aren't. These cause quality issues.

3. Forgetting to Include Fonts

If text isn't outlined and fonts aren't included, animators either can't open the file properly or have to substitute fonts.

4. Overly Complex File Structure

Dozens of nested groups and layers make files hard to navigate. Keep organization logical but not obsessively detailed.

5. Locked or Hidden Critical Elements

Ensure all layers are unlocked and visible. Hidden elements might be forgotten but still needed.

What to Include in Your Submission

The perfect package for an animator:

  1. Primary vector file: AI, SVG, or EPS with separated layers
  2. High-res PNG: Transparent background, 2000px+ wide
  3. Color specifications: Document with HEX and RGB codes
  4. Font files: If text is live, include .otf or .ttf files
  5. Brand guidelines: Any usage rules or style requirements
  6. Reference examples: Animation styles you like (optional)

Not Sure If Your File Is Ready?

Send us what you have. We'll review it for free and let you know if any prep work is needed before animation begins.

Get Free File Review →

Special Cases

What if I Only Have a Low-Res PNG?

Don't panic. Professional services (including ours) can vectorize raster logos. The process:

  1. Auto-trace using software (Adobe Illustrator Image Trace)
  2. Manual refinement for quality
  3. Color correction and cleanup
  4. Layer separation

This typically adds 1-2 hours to project time and modest additional cost.

What if My Logo Has Photographic Elements?

Logos with photos, realistic textures, or gradients that can't be vectorized still work but may have limitations:

These are workable constraints—most hybrid logos animate beautifully with proper technique.

Working With Designers vs. DIY

If You're the Original Designer

You have the source files—perfect! Just ensure layers are separated and export to the right format.

If a Previous Designer Created It

Request the original vector files from them. Most designers keep archives and can provide files upon request.

If Files Are Lost or Unavailable

Professional recreation from existing logos (website, business cards, etc.) is straightforward. Expect to add vectorization to your project scope.

After Preparation: Next Steps

Once your logo is properly prepared:

  1. Decide on animation style and concept
  2. Choose your delivery formats (Lottie, GIF, MP4)
  3. Communicate any brand personality or motion preferences
  4. Provide reference examples if you have specific ideas
  5. Set timeline expectations and delivery needs

With a well-prepared logo file, the actual animation process is smooth, fast, and produces exceptional results.

Ready to Animate?

Whether your file is perfectly prepped or needs some work, we handle all formats and preparation. Custom animations delivered in 48 hours.

Start Your Animation Project →

Final Thoughts

Proper logo preparation isn't glamorous, but it's the foundation of great animation. Think of it as sharpening your knife before cooking—you can technically cook with a dull knife, but why make things harder?

Invest 30 minutes in file preparation and save hours of back-and-forth with your animator. Your final animation will look better, cost less, and arrive faster.

Now you know what professional animators need. Whether you're preparing files yourself or working with a service, this knowledge ensures smooth collaboration and stellar results.