Easy: Place captions beneath images
8 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Easy: Place captions beneath images
I've just added a short step-by-step tutorial to ProShowThink that teaches you how to quickly place any caption you like beneath any image. Frankly I don't know why the method didn't dawn on me until this morning.
Here it is: Captions Beneath Layers in ProShow Producer - Easy!
Barbara
Here it is: Captions Beneath Layers in ProShow Producer - Easy!
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Easy: Place captions beneath images
Thanks Barbara
I like it !
Carl
I like it !
Carl
Photodex Gallery: http://www.photodex.com/share/obeeone
There are 10 types of people who understand binary:
Those who do and those who don't.
There are 10 types of people who understand binary:
Those who do and those who don't.
Re: Easy: Place captions beneath images
Entirely welcome, Carl!
I fussed with it a bit more and discovered some interesting results when filling the caption with an image, then fiddling with the Chroma Key sliders. Give it a try. The results are too varied to give specific instructions for it, but I promise you'll discover some fascinating effects. Playtime!
Barbara
I fussed with it a bit more and discovered some interesting results when filling the caption with an image, then fiddling with the Chroma Key sliders. Give it a try. The results are too varied to give specific instructions for it, but I promise you'll discover some fascinating effects. Playtime!
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Easy: Place captions beneath images
So, what does a person do when they're supposed to be paying bills? Go to the playground, of course!
I created a slide with text that I filled with the photo I planned on using in the "real" slide.
I saw there was too much black in the photo, and so I changed the background for the text to green.
Then I captured the frame.
Next, I added the captured frame to a new slide along with the photo, setting the background to brown.
Don't ask me what Chroma Key settings I used to extract the green. I tried different things until one of them worked.
Then I altered the color and brightness of the text.
I created 2 duplicates of the text layer, one of which created the shadow effect by setting its white point to 0% and adding some blur.
The second duplicate was colorized, lightened, and blurred 100% to create the subtle glow beneath the text.
If I were to set things in motion, I could have the caption, its shadow, and the glow gliding into the slide from beneath the photo.
Maybe I should pay the bills.
Barbara
I created a slide with text that I filled with the photo I planned on using in the "real" slide.
I saw there was too much black in the photo, and so I changed the background for the text to green.
Then I captured the frame.
Next, I added the captured frame to a new slide along with the photo, setting the background to brown.
Don't ask me what Chroma Key settings I used to extract the green. I tried different things until one of them worked.
Then I altered the color and brightness of the text.
I created 2 duplicates of the text layer, one of which created the shadow effect by setting its white point to 0% and adding some blur.
The second duplicate was colorized, lightened, and blurred 100% to create the subtle glow beneath the text.
If I were to set things in motion, I could have the caption, its shadow, and the glow gliding into the slide from beneath the photo.
Maybe I should pay the bills.
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Easy: Place captions beneath images
I like the tip to select a color for the background that's not in the image's color palate to help separate the background from the text when using the chroma key, that's a great idea. It might make the chroma key tool even more useful in the future for users.
To have used something other than black might have produced better edge results in some of my older shows that used caption under layers workaround by way of Producer's screen capture and chroma key tool.
I also like how it made the grungy text!
Thanks for the suggestion.
To have used something other than black might have produced better edge results in some of my older shows that used caption under layers workaround by way of Producer's screen capture and chroma key tool.
I also like how it made the grungy text!
Thanks for the suggestion.
Re: Easy: Place captions beneath images
debngar wrote:...To have used something other than black might have produced better edge results in some
of my older shows that used caption under layers workaround by way of Producer's screen capture and chroma key tool.
In my tests, the best results came most often from using either black or white (depending on the text color).
However, when filling text with an image or gradient, neither black nor white worked all that well. The problem comes
in when trying to find a color that isn't in the image.
Chroma-keying seems to be a combo of art and science. Furthermore, sometimes it works, and sometimes not so much.
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Re: Easy: Place captions beneath images
BarbaraC wrote:debngar wrote:...To have used something other than black might have produced better edge results in some
of my older shows that used caption under layers workaround by way of Producer's screen capture and chroma key tool.
In my tests, the best results came most often from using either black or white (depending on the text color).
However, when filling text with an image or gradient, neither black nor white worked all that well. The problem comes
in when trying to find a color that isn't in the image.
Chroma-keying seems to be a combo of art and science. Furthermore, sometimes it works, and sometimes not so much.
Barbara
Colorizing the image, (using Producer of course), to 1 color might work. That way any color other than the one used for the image should likely work with the Chroma-key wouldn't it?
Re: Easy: Place captions beneath images
debngar wrote:Colorizing the image, (using Producer of course), to 1 color might work. That way any color other than the one used for the image should likely work with the Chroma-key wouldn't it?
I suppose, but when you choose an image to fill text, you're probably making that choice because you like its pattern and color.
Barbara
The Frame Locker - styles, transitions, frames, backgrounds, & more.
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
Subscribe to Frame Locker News for alerts to new products.
How-to's: ProShowThink
8 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 26 guests