Ken Burns and rendering

I've been searching the postings but haven't found anything that quite fits.
I was having problem with the Ken Burns effect. I updated iMovie hoping that would solve the rendering trouble. Solved that one. Now I have a different one.
When I imput a photo using Ken Burns effect, the photo renders and immediately after the photo disappears from the line. So I tried imputting without Ken Burns. THat worked OK. Tried then to update it using the Kenburns. That seemed to work. It did the red line thing and the picture stayed there. But when played, the photo was still. Any suggestions?
Seems like I keep running into trouble, So I have been looking at alternatives. Does anyone have a suggestion on that. I have downloaded the free trial of Photo to Movie and Fotomagico. They don't seem to offer many transitions.
Thanks to all.

I have made photo dvd's and have never had a problem with the Ken Burns effect.
Here is the way I work it:
I connect my camera via USB to the Mac; a icon appears on the desk top; i drag the photos from the camera to a folder on my computer then drag the icon to the trash to disconnect the camera.
I open iMovie and drag all the photos into one of the frames. When iMovie has all my photos I save.
I then drag each photo into the time line as I want them to be viewed.
I then highlight all the photos and apply the ken burns effect.
A red line begins to run through all my photos at once. It takes some time for the computer to do the work. (More time for more photos).
After the effect has been rendered. I save and close iMovie.
I open iDVD choose a theme then drag my iMovie project into iDVD. (Optional: I add some photos to the theme as I wish and drag an audio file appropriate to the photos to be viewed.)
I play a small part of the movie to make sure the menues work and all is well.
I save my iDVD project and push burn DVD.
POOF done.

Similar Messages

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    I found a new solution.
    I select the ready "Ken Burnsed" photoclip and ctrl-click and choose copy, and then paste the exactly same kind of clip right behind the original. Then i go to the 'cropping, ken burns and rotation'- window, make shure that the start box is on the same crop as the ending of the original clip ( you can switch between start and end crops from the arrow thingy in the corner of the box) , and click crop. There I have the righty cropped stillframe right behind of the original.
    I don't know if this is the right method, but it works thanks for everyone for helping, and if you find a better way, please post. I have this thread subscribed.
    Message was edited by: AnttiS

  • Ken Burns and Crops

    I intend to edit my 4:3 dv footage in 16:9 most likely at home on FCE or possibly at university on FCP.
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  • Automatic Ken burns and framing in iPhoto and Screen saver

    I am generating a slideshow from iPhoto. When I have framed the photos properly I am checking my slideshow as a screen saver. Automatic Ken Burns options and framing are ok. Now I try to generate a slideshow directly in iPhoto, and the framing is completely changed and the Ken Burns options are different.
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  • "Ken Burns" and other photo screen savers scramble my display

    I have a three-display Mac Pro which I have just upgraded to Mavericks.   My rightmost display is a Dell P2012H rotated 90º, and every time a photo-based screen saver activates, that display gets scrambled.  While the screen saver is running it looks like one of those tile-shifting puzzles being randomized, except instead of a single image it's a combination of the desktop and whatever screensaver image was being displayed.  When the screensaver deactivates, the display stays in whatever state it was last in while the screen saver was running, making that display completely useless.  In order to reset it I have to switch resolutions and then switch back.
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    “...not use Ken Burns with vertically oriented photos...” -- WHAT!?!?!?!?!?! You’re kidding, right?
    ...I’m sorry, but personally, after Apple made the Ken Burn Effect completely USELESS for “portrait” oriented photos, I was both astonished and outraged, and have been hoping for a TRUE fix ever since. Sure, for video, later versions of iMovie do some nice things, but why on earth would Apple all of a sudden have made the Ken Burn Effect viable for only half of my photographs?!? I’ve created several DVD slideshows, most of them containing 80-90% still photos, and I am insulted by the suggestion that “padding” photographs (adding black to the sides of every “portrait” photo), via Automator or not, is the answer -- that is utter ridiculousness -- that feature should never have been removed in the first place!!! (ADD features Apple, don’t REMOVE them!!!) The only thing that would entice me to upgrade to iLife 11 would be having this simple, but to me, absolutely necessary functionality back.
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  • Ken burns and slidshows

    hi
    try to build a slidshow in imovie hd6
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    http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=4176921#4176921

  • Ken Burns and viewing full image

    I am a very new Mac users as well as a new imovie user. I put all of my images on imovie to make a slideshow. I added music to the slideshow from itunes as well. I thought I was doing pretty good When I played the slideshow using the Ken Burns slideshow feature, the whole image was not visible. The image slowly moved on the screen but the whole image was never visible. It generally cut off the image before it was finished showing all of it. I hope this makes sense. How do I get the whole image to appear?
    I did find the crop feature, and the boxes that say Start and End. When I tried this, it just made the image bigger and scanned the photo, never really showing the whole image all at once. I am quite confused.
    Also, when I am finished with this slideshow, what is the easiest way to put it on a DVD as well as on Facebook.
    I would appreciate any help that you can offer me! Thank you!

    “...not use Ken Burns with vertically oriented photos...” -- WHAT!?!?!?!?!?! You’re kidding, right?
    ...I’m sorry, but personally, after Apple made the Ken Burn Effect completely USELESS for “portrait” oriented photos, I was both astonished and outraged, and have been hoping for a TRUE fix ever since. Sure, for video, later versions of iMovie do some nice things, but why on earth would Apple all of a sudden have made the Ken Burn Effect viable for only half of my photographs?!? I’ve created several DVD slideshows, most of them containing 80-90% still photos, and I am insulted by the suggestion that “padding” photographs (adding black to the sides of every “portrait” photo), via Automator or not, is the answer -- that is utter ridiculousness -- that feature should never have been removed in the first place!!! (ADD features Apple, don’t REMOVE them!!!) The only thing that would entice me to upgrade to iLife 11 would be having this simple, but to me, absolutely necessary functionality back.
    ...So, can you tell me if the Ken Burns Effect has been fixed in the latest iLife 11 version of iMovie to treat ALL photos equally?

  • Take ken burns and burn him

    Hi!
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    When I import photos into imovie it immediately puts the ken burns effect on. How can I import so that no effects are added without my asking for them? Also how can I import so all the photos are the same length?
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    Hi Chad - you've actually posted in the wrong forum. This is iMovie HD 6. It's best if you post questions in the relevant forum - in this case, the iMovie '09 forum. But while I'm here, I'll endeavour to answer your questions.
    When I import photos into imovie it immediately puts the ken burns effect on. How can I import so that no effects are added without my asking for them?
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    In the same Timing tab as above, you will see a slider labelled "Photo Duration". Drag the slider to your desired duration for all photos that you add to the project.
    Note that these changes will apply to the current project but may not "stick" for future projects. Therefore, it's best to check these settings each time you create a new project, preferably before beginning to add content to the new project.
    You can change settings for individual photos in your project using the Inspector - but you have probably already discovered how to do this - if not, please post back.
    John

  • Ken Burns and portrait pictures

    I'm doing my first slideshow. iPhoto 5.0.4 and 23" screen. Full screen is
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    Setting "Scale photos to fill screen" nicely eliminates these black columns but
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    I've learned that one can set pan and zoom attributes for a single photo or group of photos manually.
    If you set the initial zoom so that the picture fills the width, then adjusts the start/end points for pannng (to save heads or feet, whichever are more important :-)), then things work all right.
    My only problem is that I'll have to do this for every new roll. I think that
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    Perhaps I am missing something. Is it possible to ask for such a behaviour?
    Is there a quirky setup option to this end hidden somewhere?
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    I take all my photos in landscape mode so I don't have to go through what you are doing.
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  • Ken Burns Effects not rendering

    I am having isssues with Ken Burns effects not rendering. I have no iMovie 3rd-party plug-ins. I select the timing of the effect and hit apply and the photo clip hangs and will not render. Anyone else experiencing the same issue or have a fix??
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    I have discovered the issue. It wasn't 3rd party plug-ins, but a Quicktime plug-in entitled "QuartzComposer.component". After removing, Ken Burns effects rendered as planned.

  • IMovie 6, DVDSP 4, and Ken Burns

    Hi,
    There seems to be an issue with DVDSP drop zones and Ken Burns effects rendered in iMovie 6 (or any other pan/zoom software like Photo to Movie). Dropping a pan/zoom-rendered movie into a menu drop zone looks horrid after building the project, then viewing the VIDEO_TS folder with DVD player. Same result after burning DVD.
    The drop zone video, as it pans and zooms, undulates in some areas while zooming, to the point of distraction. I cannot see this effect if the file is imported into an iDVD6 drop zone or opened in Quicktime 7. I have tried deinterlacing, blah, blah to no avail.
    ***? I paid $80 for iLife '06 and $500 for DVDSP and I get better results with iLife? This doesn't make any sense. Any advice appreciated.

    If you getting a moire (intereference) effect this is usually associated with things like checked shirts or lots of very small detail in the footage. It probably looks fine in iMovie as it is larger so you don't see the effect but when you make it smaller in the drop zone all the small detail "bunches" together and because then the effective resolution is smaller it has less pixels to play with. Also are the photos you are using for your Kens Burns montage scanned from magazines... this would also give a moire effect as the scanner has scanned the dots that the picture is made up of.
    I had a similar problem recently with a scene access menu created in After Effects. The scene in question had a great big venetian blind in the background. Looked fine as full sized footage but when reduced to a scene selection size it was "ringing" like crazy and looked horrible. The only way to get rid of it was to blur the footage slightly - as it was appearing small you didn't notice.
    If your pics are from magazines etc. then you can use your scanners descreening methods to largely eliminate any dot...
    Hope this helps
    Steve Kirkham
    PS. As Hal said welcome back Chris - and Hal is right this board does have a sense of camararderie with everyone trying to help out

  • I made a slide show in imovie using ken burns effect and when i transfer it to idvd the background shimmers.  Is there a way around this?

    If anyone has done this before and knows how to keep ken burns and lose the shimmer I would appreciate your help.

    Add some blur to the image.  I know it sounds crazy, but blurring the photo will reduce the flicker on a TV.  DVDs are really low res. and by reducing the image detail will help prevent line flicker.

  • Wavy movement of Ken Burns

    I know similar issues have been brought up with the Ken Burns affect being choppy but I haven't seen anyone point out that they're seeing it as 'wavy'.
    What I see is that photos with contrasting lines in them (in this case, kitchen cabinets against walls) look like they're wavy when panning with the Ken Burns affect. Its almost nausiating.
    Is there ANY way to do away with this? It seems to be much worse once the video is transitioned to DVD using iDVD and played on either a computer or a TV.

    You problem is not the same as the link above described (i.e. the old iMovie bug which renders jaggy stills from _non-Ken Burnsed_ images).
    You applied Ken Burns so those images should be immune to THAT problem.
    I guess what you are seeing is suboptimal subpixel rendering with Ken Burns. Sometimes the images may by TOO sharp so they induce interlace flicker when viewed on a TV. This is caused by the fact that a thin and sharp 1-line vertical object is visible only half of the time and even a 2-line vertical object may seem to jump up and down on an interlaced TV (see interlace flicker):
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    Some applications intentionally slightly blur images to reduce the flicker (Photo To Movie's higher quality setting, for example). Also in Toast Titanium 7 the output doesn't flicker.
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    The idea is to cut down on vertical resolution (excess of which causes interlace flicker on an interlaced TV) without compromising horizontal resolution. Another method is to apply a small Gaussian blur to the image. Just using a smaller resolution (640x480) in the input images also prevents flicker but the images may appear slightly fuzzy instead (and you really should not zoom into such low resolution image with Ken Burns).
    So: you might try Photo To Movie instead of Ken Burns and see if it is any better. AFAIR there is a Photo To Movie demo.

  • Kens Burns effects not saved in "original" saved slideshows in iphoto 11

    i upgraded from iphoto 9 to iphoto 11. I have several saved slideshows. When I opened the saved slideshows in iphoto11 some of the Ken Burns effects were lost (some turned out to be Ken Burns effects on a landscape photos). I tried to add the Ken Burns effects to the landscape photo in the "original theme" and could not do so. The effect would operate until I closed iphoto11 and then would fail to operate when I reopened iphoto and ran the saved slideshow. This also occurred when I made a new saved slideshow. This issue only occurred in landscape photos and did not occur in portrait photos. The Ken Burns effects on a portait photo was updated when going from 9 to 11 and new Ken Burns effects could be added to a new and old saved slideshow.
    Of the 12 Themes in saved slideshows only Ken Burns and Original have Ken Burns effects available. The Ken Burns effects are saved when Iphoto 11 is closed for both portrait and landscape photos in the Ken Burns theme and for portrait photos in the Original Theme. Landscape photos did not save in the "original theme"
    I wondered if some how my library was corrupted so I went to a MAC store and made saved slideshows using their machine and their iphoto 11. I reproduced these results on an Apple store IMAC. Apple is aware

    SixPack:
    Welcome to the Apple Discussions. As TD pointed out, making a QT movie file of a slideshow involves rendering which is then encoded once again in iDVD. IMO, the best image quality for a slideshow is obtained when you create the slideshow entirely within iDVD. Of course there's no KB effect.
    If you create the show in iMovie you can get around the double encoding by closing iMovie once the slideshow is finished. Then open the iMovie project file/package (Option-click on the project file and select Show Package Contents option), find the iDVD folder and drag the .mov file in it into the open iDVD window. This will let iDVD do the rendering of the various transitions and special effects and provide a better final product.
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    Do you Twango?
    TIP: For insurance against the iPhoto database corruption that many users have experienced I recommend making a backup copy of the Library6.iPhoto database file and keep it current. If problems crop up where iPhoto suddenly can't see any photos or thinks there are no photos in the library, replacing the working Library6.iPhoto file with the backup will often get the library back. By keeping it current I mean backup after each import and/or any serious editing or work on books, slideshows, calendars, cards, etc. That insures that if a problem pops up and you do need to replace the database file, you'll retain all those efforts. It doesn't take long to make the backup and it's good insurance.
    I've written an Automator workflow application (requires Tiger), iPhoto dB File Backup, that will copy the selected Library6.iPhoto file from your iPhoto Library folder to the Pictures folder, replacing any previous version of it. You can download it at Toad's Cellar. Be sure to read the Read Me pdf file.

  • Ken Burns vs Photo to Movie test

    I did a quick simple test to see how iMovie's Ken Burns and Photo to Movie manage high resolution, high frequency still images as their input:
    I made a 3150x1728 (5 megapixel) TIF image. I chose that particular ratio because it completely fills both NTSC and PAL 16:9 frame when imported to iMovie HD 5-6's widescreen project.
    I inserted 1 pixel thin horizontal and vertical black stripes at every 100 pixel. That kind of thin (high frequency) lines tend to flicker on a TV unless they are blurred.
    Then I imported the still to a widescreen NTSC (I chose NTSC for Karl, Fred, Kirk and other NTSC-geared geeks iMovie HD 6.0.3 project and applied a 2 second 1-5x zoom to it.
    I did a similar zoom with Photo to Movie 3.2.2's High Quality export setting and compared the results...
    Well, the iMovie zoom-in was quite interesting: at modest zoom factors many stripes were omitted and the stripes disappeared and appeared as the zoom progressed! Some stripes were rendered grayish, but they were always 1 pixel thin (a recipe for flicker on a TV!). Only near the end of the zoom-in, all the stripes appeared and begun to grow thicker (and non-flickery on a TV).
    The Photo to Movie zoom-in was much "duller": all stripes were preserved and they were slightly blurred (which prevents flicker on a TV).
    The winner: Photo to Movie.
    The input TIF and 2 second output .dv files are below (to my surprise the 15 MB input zipped to only 1.8 MB with this material). I turned ON the high quality display for you in the .dv files, but verify that the setting sticks when viewing them with QuickTime Player Pro. You can advance one frame at a time via the left/right arrow keys.
    http://www.saunalahti.fi/~shmhav/kenburnstest.zip

    Discussing DVD playback on a TV, Matti said:
    The output that used the original TIF as its input
    was full of artifacts and lots of flicker with the
    moderate zoom factors. Gaussian blur was also quite
    bad while the 875x480 downsampled TIF was very
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    Photo To Movie's Higher Quality setting was very
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    I've seen similar results here too, burning perhaps a hundred DVDs in the last few weeks. The goal was to compare DVD slideshows created by iMovie, Photo to Movie and FotoMagico. Matti's conclusions look familiar.
    My tests used photos that are the most difficult for iMovie to handle, lots of hard lines, buildings, wires, fences, roof lines, etc.
    When the goal is to burn a DVD, Photo to Movie consistently delivers good quality with a variety of source images. The quality is good across a range of image sizes and content. If you like working in Photo to Movie, you can be quite confident you'll get good results.
    But I like working in iMovie, so the goal of my tests was to find a way to make iMovie work better. The solution was to downsize the image before importing it to iMovie.
    As Matti suggested, iMovie delivers good results if the source image is downsized before importing to iMovie. Virtually all flicker is eliminated by downsizing to 640x480 (NTSC) or 768x578 (PAL). (Downsize less if you plan to use a 2x or greater Ken Burns zoom.)
    Downsizing is easily done with iPhoto's File > Export command. It takes just a few seconds to export new copies of photos at the new size.
    So is Photo to Movie "better" than iMovie for slideshows? Sometimes Yes, if you don't want to resize problem images. But often not, at least from my tests. iMovie can deliver fine results too. And to be fair to iMovie, it has other advantages.
    Note: Our tests may have little in common with the pictures you often shoot, the people pictures, the landscapes, the other "soft" images. They are WAY easier for iMovie to handle, and may not require downsizing. It depends on the photo's content.
    Karl

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