nadin: |
To: stanwhjr Thank you very much for your feeback!
stanwhjr: | Would it help more if I also or instead upload an actual brief (sya about 10 seconds) sample video to dynamically show what happens? | Certainly it would.
If the video is bigger than 10 Mb in size, you can upload to our FTP. I'll submit the instruction on the support page.
Kind regards |
Hi again, nadin.
In fact, while preparing an extensive step-by-step set of screenshots to illustrate the problem I discovered the simple solution to the problem I was having. The overlay editor is indeed handling overlay trajectories exactly as it is "told" to in that, if the overlay element is explicity sized at successive timestamp points it only changes size between those points to the extent that their programmed sizes differ. Therefore, if after initally placing the trajectory, the overlay object sized as desired at its two extreme endpoints, that size will be retained at and between any subsequently added "internal" timestamps without needing to explicitly resize at each. Of course, that the object
can if desired be explicitly reisized at any of those timestamps is potentiallu very useful.
The Video Editor's help documentation doesn't specifically address this matter, but it might helpfully be amended to do so. I think many users may, like me, intuitively expect an overlay object, if resized at a timestamp point -- usually the first one --on a trajectory, to retain that size as the "default"
unless/until resized at a later one. A full discussion of what by default does, and what can be programmed to, happen to an object moving along a trajectory might save users some initial frustration.
One other minor and unrelated matter I want to mention in passing has to do with the Chromakey effect. I've used it quite successfully to achieve "Green Screen" overlay effects, but the Chromakey slider seems to work in an all-or-none manner. That's to say the specified Chromakey color either disappears entirely or not at all. That's appropriate for most "Green Screen" uses, but I can imagine some instances in which partial transparency of the Chromakey color in the overlay might be desirable. That the Chromakey effect is activated vai a slider rather than, say, a checkbox, that capability is suggested, but it seems that any nonzero setting of the Chromakey slider forces teh selected color to complete transparency.
In any case, the more I use AVS Video Editor, the more pleased I am with its versatility, despite what seem some quirky bits of implementation. Nothing I've found elsewhere for a similar price comes anywhere near its range of features and ease of use. Kudos to the development team.