Layered photoshop files – Apple Motion 5.1.1 User Manual

Page 170

Advertising
background image

Chapter 6

Create and manage projects

170

As with QuickTime video clips, you can mix image sequences of different formats, using different
frame sizes, pixel aspect ratios, frame rates, and interlacing. For more information, see

File types

supported by Motion

on page 165.

Important:

Any imported image sequence must contain three or more digits of padding—for

example, “imagename.0001.tif.”

Collapse image sequences
The “Show image sequences as collapsed” button at the bottom of the File Browser lets you
display image sequences as a single object, rather than as the collection of files on your disk.

Click to collapse

or expand image

sequences.

Note: You can turn this feature off for numbered image files that aren’t used as an image
sequence. For example, pictures taken with digital cameras often have numbered filenames that
can be mistaken for an image sequence.

Layered Photoshop files

You can also import layered Photoshop files. Many motion graphics professionals create layouts
in Photoshop, then import the resulting multilayered file into Motion, where the layers are
animated and combined with other imported and Motion-generated objects.

There are several ways to import layered Photoshop files:

With all Photoshop layers merged together as a single Motion layer

With each Photoshop layer preserved as a separate Motion layer, nested in a new group

By choosing a single Photoshop layer

When you import all Photoshop layers as individual Motion layers, Motion places them in a new
group in the Layers list and Timeline. Each layer retains the position, opacity, and blend mode of
its corresponding original Photoshop layer.

Although you can import Photoshop text layers, the text appears in Motion as noneditable
bitmap graphics.

The following Photoshop effects are not imported into Motion:

Layer effects

Layer masks

Adjustment layers

Paths

Shapes

Add a layered Photoshop file using the drop menu

1

Drag a layered Photoshop file from the File Browser into the Canvas, Layers list, or Timeline.

2

Before releasing the mouse button, pause until the Canvas drop menu appears and the pointer

becomes curved.
This menu presents commands for importing the layered file.

3

Continuing to hold down the mouse button, drag the curved pointer over a command in the

drop menu, and when the menu item is highlighted, release the mouse button.

67% resize factor

Advertising