![]() ![]() Get your image where you want it and add those same three kinds of keyframes there too. ![]() Now go somewhere in the middle of the clip and drag your image around in the viewing window and/or use the Motion sliders. Arrow back and forth to make sure your keyframes have been added for each of those three parameters. (To add keyframes, click on the diamond, not the arrows, under the Motion clock.) If the little dot on the Timeline disappears (assuming you have selected Show Clip Keyframes), that means you turned the keyframe off, not on. (You can also right-click on the image and choose Show Clip Keyframes, but what you see is not necessarily very informative.) Add keyframes at the beginning and end of a clip, for Position, Scale, and Scale Width. That will show you arrows where you can go forward and back, to see what keyframes you have set. Click on the little clock at the right end of the Motion heading. (I usually view them in Timeline rather than Sceneline.) Choose "Show Properties." The important property for this purpose is Motion. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |