I love that, not only have you demonstrated an animated presentation using Doodly, but if I save this as a PDF or want to share the presentation, it shows still images of the handwritten text. GENIUS !!!! Thank you
Great job, thank you. Yes, more Doodly stuff, please! I could use more knowledge about other common tools used in conjunction with Doodly to take my skills to the next level.
Some really good tips to marry Doodly with PowerPoint. Would prefer PowerPoint to finalise a presentation just for the spell checker too. A question/idea if the end slide in Doodly was made a little longer wouldn't it be easier to pause the frame before the next profile/slide starts in PowerPoint? Just a thought and look forward to new tips in part 2 when you make it.
For me personally, pausing the video at the end of each slide made no difference if there was 1 or 3 seconds after each scene. With the 1 second I applied, it actually gave me 30 frames I could have chosen from each time (30 frames per second). The < and > keys allow you to step through the video frames to get it where you want and then record the timeframe, and apply it to the video animation. However some people may prefer extra time to reduce the time it may take them to pause it correctly. For me, the only different is I would have a slightly larger video file size, with additional footage I will not use. However every person produces and directs differently and you apply what works best for you. Some people have said they prefer to save the video of each scene separately as mentioned in the beginning, and then place the videos on each slide, no need to pause at all. I'm sure you will have even better ideas and methods than this as you progress.
Interesting video to learn how to combine Doodly and PowerPoint. I just want to point out that you can reveal the picture using a "Fade In" effect using Doodly. You only need to select the picture, press on the pencil icon and choose "Reveal Mode: Fade".
Thanks Daniel, I did cover this on a previous video when version 1.13 was released. The issue I was trying get across is the animations in Doodly are sequential. You cannot fade a photo whilst another element is being drawn.
Too much detail. The original was 9 and half minutes, but the responses coming back asking for expansion on the demonstration. I should have made the video two parts. Lesson learned.
I love that, not only have you demonstrated an animated presentation using Doodly, but if I save this as a PDF or want to share the presentation, it shows still images of the handwritten text. GENIUS !!!! Thank you
Simply an outstanding narrative and demonstration. In a world filled with annoying videos- your professionalism is appreciated!
Cool idea!
This was EXACTLY what I needed for the promotion of my cursive writing workbook! THANK YOU!
Brilliant demo of combining Doodly with PowerPoint!
Thank you very much. I look forward to more tips on mixing doodly and powerpoint
Superb tips. Has really opened my eyes to what is possible when combining them together.
Great job, thank you. Yes, more Doodly stuff, please! I could use more knowledge about other common tools used in conjunction with Doodly to take my skills to the next level.
Excellent tips. Thank you
Some really good tips to marry Doodly with PowerPoint. Would prefer PowerPoint to finalise a presentation just for the spell checker too.
A question/idea if the end slide in Doodly was made a little longer wouldn't it be easier to pause the frame before the next profile/slide starts in PowerPoint? Just a thought and look forward to new tips in part 2 when you make it.
For me personally, pausing the video at the end of each slide made no difference if there was 1 or 3 seconds after each scene. With the 1 second I applied, it actually gave me 30 frames I could have chosen from each time (30 frames per second). The < and > keys allow you to step through the video frames to get it where you want and then record the timeframe, and apply it to the video animation. However some people may prefer extra time to reduce the time it may take them to pause it correctly. For me, the only different is I would have a slightly larger video file size, with additional footage I will not use. However every person produces and directs differently and you apply what works best for you. Some people have said they prefer to save the video of each scene separately as mentioned in the beginning, and then place the videos on each slide, no need to pause at all. I'm sure you will have even better ideas and methods than this as you progress.
Thanks!!! 😍😍😍😍😍😍
Thanks Friend... very informative...
Interesting video to learn how to combine Doodly and PowerPoint. I just want to point out that you can reveal the picture using a "Fade In" effect using Doodly. You only need to select the picture, press on the pencil icon and choose "Reveal Mode: Fade".
Thanks Daniel, I did cover this on a previous video when version 1.13 was released. The issue I was trying get across is the animations in Doodly are sequential. You cannot fade a photo whilst another element is being drawn.
What's the point of converting a Powerpoint to a MP4 when Doodly doesn't support MP4 video?
There should be a PowerPoint template for this!
Very nice..
You should finish this video in below 10minutes.. so you've get more likes
Too much detail. The original was 9 and half minutes, but the responses coming back asking for expansion on the demonstration. I should have made the video two parts. Lesson learned.