Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I've used AE just once to animate a graphic for this promo eleven years ago. After getting frustrated trying to persuade Photoshop to do what I want with a video timeline, I have bitten the bullet, and decided to get even more frustrated with AE. This is for the SFTW threads that we run on the Photoshop forum.
My idea is to make a kaleidoscope using four layers of the same still image with two of them mirrored, and mask the relevant quadrant of each layer. My problem is that I can't get the mask to stay still while I rotate the image behind it. Google mentioned the Pan Behind Anchor Point tool, but I I need to rotate rather than pan, and I'm not getting it anyway.
It must be doable. Can someone point me in the right direction? Thanks.
BTW All are welcome to the SFTW threads, but I'm thinking that if you guys joined in, us Photoshop types would give up and go home.
Yay! I got it working. Thanks. I'd found this video about using Track Matt, but the order was different to your screen shot, and I had to search for how to make that part of the timeline visible. I think I need to take it down and put it together a few times to fix it in my head. It gives you an idea of how complete beginners can find Adobe apps confusing at times.
This is where I am right now. You can see I created two track matts, one for each jpg layer. I did look to see if I could u
...Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Can you use a track matte for the images instead of a mask. If you're more familiar with Photoshop, the equivalent is an unlinked Layer Mask.
I'm not sure I fully grasp the image you're trying to create, but this screenshot shows one layer (Shape Layer 1) being used a track matte for the 4 layers underneath. Ignore the CC Kaleida effect I've searched for, I was wondering if that would help too.
The Pan Behind Tool is a layer transform tool that allows you to adjust the anchor point of a layer rather than its position, so it can come in handy if you want to rotate an image around a specific point instead of its centre.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Yay! I got it working. Thanks. I'd found this video about using Track Matt, but the order was different to your screen shot, and I had to search for how to make that part of the timeline visible. I think I need to take it down and put it together a few times to fix it in my head. It gives you an idea of how complete beginners can find Adobe apps confusing at times.
This is where I am right now. You can see I created two track matts, one for each jpg layer. I did look to see if I could use the same one and invert it, but I am not there yet.
I initially sized the JPGs so that they would still fill the 1920 x 1080 frame when rotating, but they seemed to trim losing the outer pixels. I'll keep trying, and asking Google for now though.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thanks again @ShiveringCactus I managed to work it out, and I had to use the Pan Behind Mask tool later as well, so that was useful. I realise I am scratching the surface, but it's a lot of fun, and I have always felt bad for having a full CC subscription and only using Photoshop, and occasionally PremPro. This is what I made. I'm wanting to do more with it now, so I hope you don't mind me coming back for help.
Find more inspiration, events, and resources on the new Adobe Community
Explore Now