Role overview
The Motion Designer is responsible for shaping movement that supports clarity, rhythm, and continuity across the studio’s work. This role focuses on transitions, timing, and subtle motion rather than visual emphasis. Movement is used to guide attention and support narrative flow.
The role requires restraint, precision, and sensitivity to pacing. Motion here is not decorative. It is considered, intentional, and integrated into the wider visual language.
About the role
As Motion Designer, you work closely with the Creative Director, editors, and production teams to develop motion that aligns with the overall direction of each project. You are involved during development and post-production, ensuring that movement feels cohesive and purposeful.
The role values simplicity and alignment. Instead of drawing focus to motion itself, the work supports structure, meaning, and transition across film and digital outputs.
Key responsibilities
• Design motion that supports narrative and visual clarity
• Develop transitions and movement systems with restraint
• Collaborate closely with creative and post-production teams
• Refine timing, pacing, and spatial relationships
• Ensure motion aligns with the studio’s visual direction
• Support review and refinement throughout post-production
Required experience
• Demonstrated experience in motion design or related practice
• Strong understanding of timing, rhythm, and visual flow
• Ability to work collaboratively across disciplines
• Comfort refining work through feedback and iteration
• A calm, process-led approach to design decisions
Working environment
This role is based on-site within the studio. Work is structured around focused production periods and collaborative review sessions. Time is given for refinement, allowing motion to develop with clarity rather than urgency.
Compensation and approach
Compensation reflects experience and responsibility. The studio prioritizes sustainable working rhythms, clear communication, and conditions that support thoughtful motion practice.
Closing note
This role is suited to individuals who approach motion as a supporting language rather than a focal point. If your work values restraint, rhythm, and integration, this position offers space to contribute with intention and care.