Denny Kyser
March 10th, 2008, 10:19 AM
I see many of your highlight shows that you have the front of the program rolling through a scene with a low opacity. How do you do this? I have a program but with the flowers in the background not sure this would have the same effect.
Just wondering if you just match up a font the best you can and re type it?
Dave LaBrec
March 10th, 2008, 01:38 PM
Denny,
I edit with Vegas which has a feature called Track Motion that allows you to resize and/or move a clip or image across the screen in any direction. I am sure most NLE's have this feature, maybe with a different name.
I scan the invitation, save it as a jpeg, bring the file into my time line and then use track motion with key frames to make the image move. It takes some trial and error to get it to look right. I also adjust the opacity, usually to around 30%.
This will work best if the invitation is wide,has a white background with dark, bold lettering.
If you are just trying to create your own title by matching the font on the invitation, there is a website where you can upload a small jpeg or gif of the invitation, or any file and the site will analyze the image and tell you what font it is. I forget the exact site, but I think if you google "what the font", you can find it.
Denny Kyser
March 10th, 2008, 04:01 PM
This will work best if the invitation is wide,has a white background with dark, bold lettering.
I was hoping this would be the case, but this one has a beige background with flowers that are a light green, font that is a Hunter Green.
I have scanned it and will play with it, may post it here before I use it in the highlight show.
Samuel Hinterlang
March 10th, 2008, 04:30 PM
Denny,
What NLE do you use and can you upload an image?
I'm sure we can help you out. I have had to pull keys on footage that had to be keyed twice. Usually do one on color and one on luma, or sometimes two color keys. I'd key the beige out and then pull a second key for your flowers.
Also, as Dave mentioned: http://www.myfonts.com/WhatTheFont/
Let us know if you find your answer.
Denny Kyser
March 10th, 2008, 06:32 PM
I am using Adobe Premier Pro CS3, Here is the program.