Kevin Richard
July 4th, 2012, 10:49 AM
I'm sure this has been answered but without knowing the proper names the keywords of "zoom" and "pan" are really too ambiguous.
You find lots of "Ken Burns Effects" stuff, which isn't hard to do.
The "new" trick that people are doing, to just explain what I'm looking for, is where they cut out the "foreground" people and then push into our out of the image making it look like they are on two different planes.
This isn't terribly difficult to do in it's basic form but I'd like to go beyond that and push in and past the people. This of course requires rebuilding the background in photoshop with something like a rubber stamp tool and a lot of liberal creativity.
But once that is done, what is the best way to move between the two images in Vegas? I've done a small test and it was decent, but moving about is cumbersome just using pan and crop. Is there a way to place them all on one track and each have their place so I can just zoom on one layer and basically move the camera through as one vs two separate tracks?
Thanks in advance and if there is already tutorials for this either point me at them or give me the names of this "technique" so I can google more successfully.
You find lots of "Ken Burns Effects" stuff, which isn't hard to do.
The "new" trick that people are doing, to just explain what I'm looking for, is where they cut out the "foreground" people and then push into our out of the image making it look like they are on two different planes.
This isn't terribly difficult to do in it's basic form but I'd like to go beyond that and push in and past the people. This of course requires rebuilding the background in photoshop with something like a rubber stamp tool and a lot of liberal creativity.
But once that is done, what is the best way to move between the two images in Vegas? I've done a small test and it was decent, but moving about is cumbersome just using pan and crop. Is there a way to place them all on one track and each have their place so I can just zoom on one layer and basically move the camera through as one vs two separate tracks?
Thanks in advance and if there is already tutorials for this either point me at them or give me the names of this "technique" so I can google more successfully.