Book Image

Apple Motion 5 Cookbook

By : Nicholas Harauz
Book Image

Apple Motion 5 Cookbook

By: Nicholas Harauz

Overview of this book

Let's face it, people like images that move. Whether you see images on a moving billboard, walk into a bank with an LCD screen, watch TV, or surf the Web, motion graphics are everywhere. With an even greater demand to integrate motion graphics in just about every type of video or interactive content there is, this book will help you get there with Motion 5. It's all about creating eye-catching titles, transitions, and effects!"Apple Motion 5 Cookbook" contains exercises for the beginner and seasoned motion graphics user. You will learn how to navigate Motion's interface and quickly grasp the tools available to you while creating sophisticated and sleek animations in both 2D and 3D environments. Not forgetting visual effects, we will also explore motion tracking and green screen techniques that will help you composite like a pro. Let's launch the application, grab a cup of coffee, and get started on this exciting journey!The exercises will take you right from creating your very first Motion project through to export. You will learn how to navigate quickly and efficiently through Motion's complex interface and toolsets so that you can focus oncreating your masterpiece!You will learn how to create a new project and import material into that project from the File Browser and Motion's vast and rich content library. From there, you will learn to manipulate and animate these source files using Motion's behaviors, classic keyframing techniques, adding filters, and master the built-in tools such as particle systems that will knock your socks off! Last but not least, you will export your projects to a variety of different formats including DVD, as a Final Cut Pro generator, and the Web.The "Apple Motion 5 Cookbook" contains downloadable content for each chapter and is packed with screenshots and illustrations. After reading this book, you'll be creating motion graphics and visual effects in no time!
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Apple Motion 5 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Choosing a Motion project


What do we want out of Motion 5? Where do we want our projects to live? How big should it be? The minute we launch Motion, we are presented with a lot of choices. Let's take an in-depth look at some of those options.

How to do it...

  1. To launch Motion, click on the application icon on your Dock or double-click it from the Applications folder.

    Tip

    Downloading the example code

    You can download the example code files for all Packt books you have purchased from your account at http://www.packtpub.com. If you purchased this book elsewhere, you can visit http://www.packtpub.com/support and register to have the files e-mailed directly to you.

    The high resolution colored images of the book can also be found in the code bundle.

  2. Upon entering, we are presented with a welcome window called the Project Browser. It can be divided into three sections. On the left-hand side, we have the option of starting with a recent, blank, or pre-existing composition (this is where we can find our preinstalled Motion templates). Since this is our first time here, make sure Blank is selected from the list, as shown in the following screenshot:

  3. In the middle, we can choose between five projects. Motion Project is usually chosen when we want to start and finish our work solely in Motion. If we choose Final Cut Effect, Generator, Transition, or Title, we are telling Motion that when we save our project, we want to make it available in Final Cut. Depending on the type of project you select, it will save in the corresponding section in FCP X's Media Browser, as shown here. For now, make sure Motion Project is selected.

  4. On the right, you can choose from a variety of different presets depending on the material you're working with or where you're exporting. Say your footage was shot in Europe with a DSLR camera. You could choose a Broadcast HD 1080 setting with a Frame Rate value of 25. The duration could match the length of the files you're bringing in and you could choose to display it as timecode, frames, or seconds. For this exercise, let's choose the Broadcast HD 720 setting with a frame rate of 29.97 and a 6 second duration. Press Open.

  5. The Motion interface launches and we're ready to bring in some media to work with.

There's more…

Here's a little more information on the different types of Motion projects and the attributes associated with them.

Motion templates

If you choose Composition from the left-hand side of the Project Browser window, you can choose from one of the pre-existing Motion templates available.

Note

Motion and Final Cut Pro X were meant to work together.

Turning Motion Projects to Final Cut Generators

If you open Motion by choosing Motion Project, you can still make it available in Final Cut by going to File | Save As and then clicking Final Cut Generator from the dialog box.

Most of the parameters we see in Motion can be brought into Final Cut. In fact, we can even create rigs where a slider, checkbox, or pop-up widget can change several parameters at once.

Rigging and publishing

While saving a Motion project for use in FCP X is already powerful, nothing beats being able to take specific parameter controls from Motion's architecture and make them available inside FCP X. You'll learn more about this extremely powerful workflow in Chapter 11, Publishing Your Work to FCP X.

Note

Project properties for Motion can be adjusted in the Project Properties menu.

Project Properties

If you choose the wrong project settings, don't worry; you can always go to Edit | Project Properties and change the preset, frame rate, and time display of your project.

See also

  • Publishing a Motion 5 generator and its parameters to FCP X in Chapter 11, Publishing Your Work to FCP X.

  • Creating an effect for FCP X in Chapter 11, Publishing Your Work to FCP X.

  • Creating a transition for FCP X in Chapter 11, Publishing Your Work to FCP X.