Adobe 22030000 User Guide - Page 90
Menus: Beyond the basics, Video and audio in menus, About motion menus
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86 Chapter 6: Menus: Beyond the basics For you more adventurous designers, Adobe Encore CS3 lets you create motion menus, video thumbnail buttons, three-color button highlighting, and auto-activating buttons. You can also customize button routing and numbering, as well as create your own styles for menu elements. Video and audio in menus About motion menus A menu can include sound and motion. You can replace the entire background of a menu with a video file, as well as link it to an audio file. A video can serve as a moving backdrop to a menu or provide all the visual elements of the menu except for the button highlighting. The video can include, for example, a moving background, scrolling credits, and even the button images. The menu itself needs only to include a placeholder background and the button subpictures (in button layer sets) that align with the button images in the video. How long the video background or audio plays and whether it loops depends on the duration and loop settings of the menu. (See "About menu display time and looping" on page 90.) If you want a smaller image, consider resizing or masking the video in a video-editing application, such as Adobe Premiere Pro, or masking a portion of the video with a layer in the menu. The Library panel contains menu template (EM) files that include video backgrounds. See also "Create video thumbnail buttons" on page 87 "About menu templates" on page 92 Add a video background to a menu ❖ Do one of the following: • Select the menu in the Project panel. Then, in the Properties panel, click the Motion tab and drag the Video pick whip to the video file in the Project panel. • Hold down the Alt key (Windows) or Option key (Mac OS) and drag the video file from the Project panel to the menu in the Menu Viewer. Note: You select a video asset, not a timeline, in the Project panel to replace the menu background with video. The first bright (nonblack) frame of the video replaces the menu background. This frame serves as a placeholder in the menu PSD file and is displayed during previewing as well, unless you choose to render the motion menus in the Preview panel. (See "About previews" on page 169.) When you build the project, Encore renders the video starting from the first frame. You can also set the menu background to the frame at the specified Loop Point timecode. This is especially useful when you want to align button subpicture layers with button images in the video background. (See "About menu display time and looping" on page 90.)