![]() ![]() This helps when you have 50 or 60 slides. You can also set the entire project to 2 seconds and change your title screen time. Anything quicker for a slide show will be hard to take in unless thats what you want. Since the least amount of time you can set is 0.25 try something closer to 2 - 2.5 seconds. The last icon is a little clock, for setting the time of the slide. Once done click the "done" button to return or click the next slide and continue cropping and panning. The hand moves it and the cross-hair resizes it. Fit shows no box, Crop shows a green box and Ken Burns shows red and green boxes. While in crop mode you will see one, two or no boxes over your video preview box. Ken Burns is for the cool pan and zoom effects. Be warned it may crop your image incorrectly. Fit is for exactly as it sounds, fitting your image to the video size you have selected. ![]() I am sure there are probably more, I just don't know enough about iMovie yet to know how to set them up. There are three options, fit, crop and Ken Burns. You use this to pan or zoom the camera across your slide. The second icon from the top left corner is the crop tool. Since all my images were good already I left all these alone. Here you can change the levels, exposure, brightness, contrast, saturation, and white point. Make a Slideshow with iMovie 10 John Whitehead Images 7. ![]() The first one in the top left is for Video Adjustments. As you move your pointer over each slide you will notice three little icons pop up. Now that we have all of our pictures added to our video we need to tweak each slide to make it look good. This was also my first "project" using iMovie so please add a few comments. All of my knowledge is self taught and/or comes from trial and error. I have been using Adobe Photoshop 7 for about seven years and just recently switched to Adobe Photoshop CS. Another quick note: I have no prior knowledge on movie production or professional image editing. What resulted was a cool video and an instructable on how to use iMovie that I believe anyone can wrap their head around. I had this stuck in my head and thought it would make a funny video if I remade it with Instructables images as a slide show and used the audio from the commercial. In the process of playing with it and surfing this site I was inspired by another post to learn something new about iMovie. I have learned a lot about it in a very short time. If you own a Mac you already have this, SCORE! I recently purchased a new MacBook and I am really enjoying it. This can be accomplished with a lot of other software but iMovie comes with a new Mac. Every question won’t be answered, we don’t reply to email, and we cannot provide direct troubleshooting advice.In this instructable I will show you the basics of iMovie and try to teach you how to put together a great video edit and slide show. If not, we’re always looking for new problems to solve! Email yours including screen captures as appropriate, and whether you want your full name used. Read our super FAQ to see if your question is covered. We’ve compiled a list of the questions we get asked most frequently along with answers and links to columns: It could be overkill, but you can get by with the basics or push up the pizzazz factor, then export as a movie. While it’s convenient and fast to create a slideshow within Photos, you can have more options and avoid the need to re-arrange images and videos by using iMovie, which preserves the sort order in your albums when you import. IMovie is an option to create a slideshow, albeit as a fixed movie. You don’t get all the controls and options in a separate slideshow Project, but you can pick a theme and music. In an album, you can also click the Slideshow link at top. This feature isn’t always apparent, but you can create an ad hoc slideshow by selecting any set of images in any view and Control-clicking. This is tedious and unnecessary, but lets you use all the slideshow features. After creating a slideshow, you can use the thumbnails at the bottom to re-arrange media into the order you want. ![]()
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