Pictures from a Relative
What do you do when friends or relatives
email copies of pictures they think are wonderful?... and sometimes you do too. With Photo Story
and Movie Maker, it's easy to whip up a quick, easy, fun to do animated video. By adding the
dimensions of movement, music, and maybe even story-telling, it can be a great way to say thanks
and show how much you appreciate them... and they get to see your video skills. Just be careful
not to tip the balance between their pictures and your editing.... your goal is to enhance -
not diminish them by overdoing your add-ons.
One of my
brothers
recently emailed 3 of his pictures of California condors flying over the
Grand Canyon... I turned them around into a short Photo Story and posted it
on neptune.
He liked the story and sent 7 more...
a bigger better challenge... a longer story, but still a fun and easy one. They went into my
backlog of pictures to use someday, and this newsletter is the day.
NASA's World Wind,
featured in last week's issue, gave me more than a few more hours of fun during the week. It'll
show up again in this one as I use a screen shot from it to help with the condors. Any location-specific
scene can be accented with a map as part of a story, and what scene isn't location specific?
I love the 3 dimensional views of
the Coast and Geodetic Survey maps... my snapshot of the canyon uses that view option.
Mix them together in Movie Maker and
there's another condor flick at Neptune. Here's the link:
California Condors
I'll go through all the steps of putting
it together. Routinely making such short subjects helps fine tune or enhance your skills. Sometimes
it's not much difference in time than playing a game of solitaire during a break from a large
project.
...
before doing it, a few notes...
What's Happening?
Software has lots of parts and pieces
that are often usable in other places... here's a couple I came across over the past week:
Pinnacle
Studio 8 was bundled with my Dazzle 80 capture device
It has a subfolder named Alpha Magic, and in it are 52 grayscale mask images in JPG format,
720x480 size.
I'll sometimes take a couple clips
into Studio 8 to add something, and bring them back into MM2, but I hadn't taken a transition
from Studio 8 into Movie Maker.
I just finished updating the online
tutorial for the new release of Transition Maker 2, and it struck me that one of the key things
you do in TM2 is make grayscale masks.
I brought the 52 Alpha Magic images
into new TM2 projects, packaged them up and published the projects to Movie Maker 2... would
they function there? YESSS!!! now I have my Studio 8 transitions to use there or in Movie Maker.
The picture above shows some of them in MM2, including the puzzle pieces one that's my favorite
in this group.
Adobe Encore,
a DVD authoring package, is available as a 30 day trial version. My trial period was up a few
days ago and it was time to uninstall it. Rather than sweep it away in total, I went into the
folders and saw hundreds of PhotoShop project files for menu styles and buttons... all of which
make great study pieces.
In using parts and pieces of software,
be careful not to cross the bounds of what is legal and appropriate.
MyDVD Studio Deluxe 6
- I contacted Sonic with a couple questions and concerns about the Photo Story 3 DVD plug-in.
The version 4.5 of MyDVD on my laptop didn't accept the PS3 stories, nor would it open the DVDs
burned by the new plug-in... and the plug-in didn't seem to be professionally supported - the
website page to register software didn't have it listed, nor did the online support area.
Sonic was very responsive... the online
pages were updated quickly. Beyond that, they gave me the version 6 package of MyDVD to review
and use.
I don't typically do critical reviews
of software, but Sonic's DVD plug-in for PhotoStory 3, and even this newer version of MyDVD...
are so closely aligned with Photo Story and Movie Maker that reviewing them is appropriate.
I'm well into the installation and checking, and next week's newsletter will be about how they
look.
Personal Database
- Personal computers and so rich in information that, at the same time that things get bigger
and better, the administrative chore of keeping info about things is more challenging.
I've converged toward use of a single
database for my primary information needs... something I started years ago as a pack of a dozen
household databases, today all converged into a single one that I can run off a thumdrive if
I want.
I've decided to offer it to others
in two ways. Free for the asking to regular paid newsletter subscribers, and to others for a
$10 donation (donation in that the way to ask for it would be the Donate button on the What's
New page of my site.
... more info will be in upcoming
newsletters.
The California Condors - Plan
Back to the main topic... making something
entertaining from 10 still pictures of California condors flying over the Grand Canyon.
A video needs an opening,
a middle and a closing... regardless of how short or long.
While sitting in my backlog of projects for 3 weeks, waiting for the inspiration of an appropriate
opening, along came World Wind. I can now go anyplace in the world and get a great snapshot
or video clip. I'll use that as the opening... then the condor pix for the main body, and close
with a text credits clip... the closing is always easy... credits and my URL often suffice.
The opening is critical...
if you don't have viewers interested from the first few seconds, they or their thoughts go elsewhere.
If you can keep them past the first few moments, they'll probably watch the rest.
The end product won't be a DVD...
it'll be a short flick for my brother and this newsletter. A high quality 320x240 for online
viewing might be sufficient, but showing off the condor pictures seems to want the video at
640x480. I'm still working on the best profiles to use for videos uploaded to neptune... the
answer might be different for each viewer... this one went up as a 640x480 video.
The Photo Story
Here's a project level view of the
story... showing all images used. 3 copies of the same map image for the changes in animations,
followed by 9 condor pictures.
I didn't use a 10th condor picture...
it was great too as an individual picture, but appeared too similar to another one when it was
in the story and being animated...

For this kind of project, panning
and zooming is done with a Photo Story, and music and titling added in Movie Maker.
Create a Route Marking Clip
Newsletter #42 covered the development
and use of a Photo Story 3 template project file to annotate a route on a map or image... it's
fully covered on the Photo Story 3 > Do Amazing Things page of the website, including a link
to download the template.
The template uses a paint brush stroke
in Paint... to take it up a notch, I'll so something different.
If you watched the video sample on
neptune, did you happen to notice that the route marking was done with little condors instead
of a paint brush?
And that the color around the condors was green, the same green as the map, not the sky color
from the picture being used to crop the little condor from.
The first step is to crop
one of the condors from a picture... here's one in a full-sized image cropped from
the original picture, using IrfanView's cropping feature (mouse dragging to define a rectangular
area, followed by Control-Y to crop the area).
Next
resize it in IrfanView (Image > Resize > Set new size as a percentage of original
- the one at the left is 15%). That gets us a little bird to use as a stamp to mark the route,
but with the background color of the sky, not aligning with the picture we'll be placing it
on.
To have the video flow smoothly from
the opening animation of the Photo Story to the beginning of the route-marking snippet, I took
a snapshot from the story clip in the Movie Maker collection... getting a 640x480
image to use as the background for the route marking story.
Open the MM2 snapshot in Paint.

Select the eyedropper
tool of Paint and 'pickup' the green of the map... now you'll be painting with
that shade of green.
View > Zoom > Custom and view the
area of the condor at 800% size easier paint the pixels around the condor to the picked up green
color... it'll be such a pixilated picture that painting is easy.
Crudely paint
around the condor... crude at 800% will look OK at 100%.

Save the picture from Paint and open
it in IrfanView... crop the condor again so it's just the
image of it on green... this is the 'stamp' to use to mark the path.
Open the base map image again in Paint
- the original snapshot from MM2. Use the 'condor stamp' to mark the path from
the campgrounds of the Grand Canyon to the rim where the condors are.
Following the online instructions
for using the Photo Story 3 template, save the picture in Paint as 0.jpg, apply
the first mark (Control-C in IrfanView, followed by a series of Control-V paste commands in
Paint to apply each stamp mark... position the stamp each time, and save the image after each
mark to the next higher numbered picture file to be used in the Photo Story - save them as jpg
format).
If you want to do it better, you could
use a transparency setting around the condor instead of coloring the background green... using
something like PhotoShop. I try to limit the tools used in the newsletters to the lowest priced
ones, and live within their limitations, so I use IrfanView and Paint. But I'll dip into PhotoShop
or Premiere at times to do something better.
The PS3 template takes up to 24 pictures...
if you find you're done marking in 15, go ahead and just use the 15... you can always trim the
clip in Movie Maker as you put the movie project together.
The Movie
This project was easy to put together
in Movie Maker. Here's the project timeline... only 3 clips, each of which
used a Photo Story as a source file.
It started as one long clip, the Photo
Story with the map and condor pictures. I split it to insert the marked path story, so the final
project file has 3 main clips.
The fine-tuning of
the 3 clips in Movie Maker was:
Opening map - fade in from black.
Path Story -
Speed Up, double as the unfolding
path is typically too slow. I also added Ease In.
There's no panning or zooming built into the path template, so adding some subtle zooming here
is appropriate.
Condor segment -
Light - Frame2 Soft from one
of the Pixelan Spice FX packages... watch the video to see what the lighting change does.
Transitions are simple fades from
one clip to the next, added by dragging the clip on the right to overlap the one to the left
of it. It's my most often used transition.

Almost a third of the short video
is the opening map... and by the time you see a condor picture the movie is half over.
You may remember the music... a classical
piano parlor type... computer generated by Pinnacle Studio 8... My library
has 3 minute versions of a number of them, easy to close by trimming at an appropriate spot
and fading out. If a movie needs a longer one, I'll go into Studio 8 and make one of the duration
I need.... computer-generated music by Photo Story 3 would work too.
5 overlay text clips and one closing
in-line one completes the project... render to a 640x480 profile and
upload to neptune.
Closing
This newsletter is going out a bit
on the early side this week... we have overnight company coming tonight...
And, yes I have my brother's permission
to share his pictures with you... I hope you find them as great as I do. I think that stories
and movies like this are what Microsoft had in mind for home users and those new to video editing...
I didn't come across any issues when putting them together. The processes couldn't be easier
or the results better.
I look forward to comments and discussion about this and other
newsletters on the forums at:

Windows Movie
Makers.net
Have a great week...
PapaJohn
Movie
Maker 2 and Photo Story 3 -
www.papajohn.org
Photo Story 2 -
www.photostory.papajohn.org
Products and Services
I'm involved in many things that support
the users of Movie Maker and Photo Story, and adding more daily. Here's a list of what is available
to the public. Some are free and others reasonably priced.
Books and Magazines
Movie Maker 2 - Do Amazing Things
(with
its online companion on
www.papajohn.org)
Movie Maker 2 - Zero to Hero - with
support on the
Friends of Ed forum
MaximumPC's winter quarterly special
- with a 7 page tutorial 'Make a Killer Home Movie with Maker 2' - currently on newsstands in
the USA through March 7th, a few days away.
Packt Publishing of Birmingham, U.K.
is publishing the first book about VirtualDub, expected out this or next month. My contribution
was the introductory chapter.
Websites
Movie Maker 2 and Photo Story 3 -
www.papajohn.org
- 3 goals: the online companion to the Do Amazing Things book, a detailed tutorial for Photo
Story 3, and helping you solve Movie Maker 2 problems.
PhotoStory 2 -
www.photostory.papajohn.org
- a detailed tutorial about using it. It's not a problem-solving site.
Online Support - Forums and Newsgroups
I'm a regular on many online forums
and newsgroups, the main ones being:
Forums
are open to all for viewing, but require registration of those who
want to post. Moderators actively participate to ensure the forum discussions move forward and
stay on track.
Movie Maker and Photo Story forums
at Windows
Movie Makers
Movie
Maker 2 forum at
SimplyDV.com
Newsgroups
are wide open for all to view and post... moderation is collective by the participants.
Windows XP Movie Maker newsgroup -
microsoft.public.windowsxp.moviemaker
Photo Story 2 newsgroup -
microsoft.public.plus
Photo Story 3 newsgroup -
microsoft.public.windowsxp.photos
Weekly Newsletters
Movie Maker 2/Photo Story newsletter.
The annual subscription is $20 and the link to subscribe is on the main page of my Movie Maker
website at:
www.papajohn.org
Topics
for upcoming newsletters (always subject to change):
#45 - Sonic MyDVD version 6.1
#46 - Civil War Project - part 2
#47 - open (I'll post to the forum
as soon as I know)
Older newsletters (more than 6 issues
ago) are posted to an
Archive Site
at Windows Movie Makers.
Software
Add-On Transitions and
Effects
Transition
Maker 2 (TM2) is a utility for the ultimate in
making your own personal and custom transitions for Movie Maker 2. It's a joint product from
Patrick Leabo, the programmer, and myself. Version 2 was released a week ago and I'm still working
on updating the online tutorial.
I
routinely beta test the
Pixelan packages and think very highly of their people and products.

ProDAD's Adorage package for Movie Maker 2
provides an additional source of professionally developed transitions and effects.
Personal Database
Managing your personal information
is more of a challenge as hard drives get bigger and the internet more robust. Developing my
personal database has been an ongoing project for many years and it is now available to others.
A free copy is available to the regular
subscribers of this newsletter... send an email to request a copy.
To others, it's $10... use the Donate
button on the top of the What's New page of the website to get a copy.
Online Gallery
An online gallery that fully aligns
with the main priority of the website is the
'PapaJohn Expert Zone' at neptune.
Check it at
Neptune and the Distributing > Neptune page of the website, where there's
a developing tutorial about how to use the service.
Training
The Portage, Michigan
library is adding a new training session to their regularly scheduled ones: introduction to
Movie Maker, and an Advanced Movie Maker session. Scheduled sessions are:
Monday - June 20
- 6-7:30 Introduction to Movie Maker 2
Monday - July 18
- 6-7:30 Movie Maker 2 Workshop
Monday - August 15
- 6-7:30 Movie Maker 2 Workshop
Other fee-based services
If
you can't save a movie because your project has become too complex, e-mail
a copy and I'll divide it into manageable sub-projects, and provide detailed instructions about
how to render the parts and assemble them into your final movie. $49.95 - for details, see the
sidebar on the Problem Solving > Can't Save a Movie page of
www.papajohn.org
Movie Maker 2/Photo Story
training and support services start at $50 per hour - send an email -
PapaJohn@CharterMi.net and I'll help you determine your needs, and work
with you to plan and implement them.
Wedding combo website/video
packages - starting at $2,500 + travel expenses. See
Jill-MarkWedding or the bottom branch of the Movie Maker 2 website for
a sample of what you can expect for the online portion of the package.