Animating a Logo
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- Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:32 pm
Animating a Logo
Basically, what I want to do is take my PNG image, overlay it on top of a video sequence, and slowly have it shrink in size.
How would I go about doing this?
I do have Adobe Premiere and After Effects, by the way.
Thanks!
How would I go about doing this?
I do have Adobe Premiere and After Effects, by the way.
Thanks!
- Pwolf
- Friendly Neighborhood Pwaffle
- Joined: Thu May 03, 2001 4:17 pm
- Location: Some where in California, I forgot :\
- Contact:
- Pwolf
- Friendly Neighborhood Pwaffle
- Joined: Thu May 03, 2001 4:17 pm
- Location: Some where in California, I forgot :\
- Contact:
- Emotive
- ...the Meditant
- Joined: Sat Nov 04, 2006 12:20 pm
- LivingFlame
- Joined: Sat May 28, 2005 4:41 pm
- Location: Closer than you think...
And that, my friends, is how you make a tutorial. \o/Cast to Stone wrote:http://img254.imageshack.us/img254/2170/motion1me6.png
... yea ...
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- Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:32 pm
Is anyone here familiar with Macromedia Flash?
So, I got a PNG image (logo) and I created a motion tween with it. For a period of 50 frames, it decreases in size. Now, what I want to do is export this entire sequence as individual PNG images, each image representing a frame in the tween process.
Can this be done? I hope I made this relatively clear... x_X
So, I got a PNG image (logo) and I created a motion tween with it. For a period of 50 frames, it decreases in size. Now, what I want to do is export this entire sequence as individual PNG images, each image representing a frame in the tween process.
Can this be done? I hope I made this relatively clear... x_X
- Emotive
- ...the Meditant
- Joined: Sat Nov 04, 2006 12:20 pm
You do mean you did it in premiere, right?
If you did in macromedia flash can't help you there, though then you'd be asking in the wrong forum anyway. :p (though the way you say it it sure sounds like you made it periodically shrink in premiere, in the way that I mentioned before)
Anyway, if you want to export individual frames for premiere, go to file-export-frame on the far upper left (shortcut: ctrl-shift-m). You're going to have to scroll through the timeline and export each one individually, unless a filmstrip will do (in which case the shortcut is ctrl-m , click settings and select filmstrip). I don't think you can extract .png's from premiere, at least not in my version (premiere pro 2) - you can choose from bmp, gif, targa and tiff.
If you did in macromedia flash can't help you there, though then you'd be asking in the wrong forum anyway. :p (though the way you say it it sure sounds like you made it periodically shrink in premiere, in the way that I mentioned before)
Anyway, if you want to export individual frames for premiere, go to file-export-frame on the far upper left (shortcut: ctrl-shift-m). You're going to have to scroll through the timeline and export each one individually, unless a filmstrip will do (in which case the shortcut is ctrl-m , click settings and select filmstrip). I don't think you can extract .png's from premiere, at least not in my version (premiere pro 2) - you can choose from bmp, gif, targa and tiff.
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- Joined: Sun May 30, 2004 6:32 pm
- Emotive
- ...the Meditant
- Joined: Sat Nov 04, 2006 12:20 pm
No, why don't you try playing around with it a bit instead of asking every little thing? If you set a keyframe (by pressing that little circular button to the left of motion, you enable keyframing and set a keyframe) and set the value to something, then go a few frames later in the timeline and set the motion value to something else, the size will gradually decrease from the first value to the second value, in the timespan between the two frames.
So if you want to decrease the size from a value to another value in 50 frames, set a keyframe in the first frame, setting the value to something, then go 50 frames later and set it to the value you want it to reach in the end. It will gradually decrease.
So if you want to decrease the size from a value to another value in 50 frames, set a keyframe in the first frame, setting the value to something, then go 50 frames later and set it to the value you want it to reach in the end. It will gradually decrease.