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How to do infinite background with images sliding to the right or left

Community Beginner ,
Jun 07, 2024 Jun 07, 2024

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Hi,

Im new with premiere pro, and i've been stuck for two days trying to do like a "infinite scroll" with the same background and multiple images. 
My idea is to create some sort of "inifnite, up to X images" scroll with images sliding to one side, with zooms in and out. But i cant manage to do this

 

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Effects and Titles , How to

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correct answers 1 Pinned Reply

Adobe Employee , Jun 07, 2024 Jun 07, 2024

Hi @Ernest37571606m5s2,

Thanks for the message. I've done this.

 

  1. Import the images into an Essential Graphic layer. Go to Graphics & Titles > New Layer > From File, select the files, and click Import.
  2. Select the second layer. Change the X values for each image to be equidistant. Work your way down the stack of images. A calculator and/or a spreadsheet might help you quickly calculate these values.
  3. Select the layers once you have them equidistant and laid out in the Program Monitor.
  4. Zoom the Pr
...

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Community Expert ,
Jun 07, 2024 Jun 07, 2024

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Might pull this off in Premiere but it will involve a lot of work.

After Effects is usually the way to go.

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 07, 2024 Jun 07, 2024

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Do you have a tutorial i can follow? I've never tried with ae

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Community Expert ,
Jun 07, 2024 Jun 07, 2024

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No I dont have any tutorial.

Best is to start with the basics. Get your self a subscription at LinkedInLearning and learn Ae from the ground up.

 

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 07, 2024 Jun 07, 2024

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Hi @Ernest37571606m5s2,

Thanks for the message. I've done this.

 

  1. Import the images into an Essential Graphic layer. Go to Graphics & Titles > New Layer > From File, select the files, and click Import.
  2. Select the second layer. Change the X values for each image to be equidistant. Work your way down the stack of images. A calculator and/or a spreadsheet might help you quickly calculate these values.
  3. Select the layers once you have them equidistant and laid out in the Program Monitor.
  4. Zoom the Program Monitor to 10% (See the "Select Zoom Level" controls) to see the "offstage" area and to view the layers lined up.
  5. Click the Toggle Animation for Position. It looks like a cross in the Essential Graphics panel. A Position keyframe is set for each layer.
  6. Move the playhead to the end of the animation.
  7. Drag the leading layer through the Program Monitor until all the layers have moved through it
  8. Playback the animation (note: you may need to render).

    Please come back with any questions.

 

Thanks,
Kevin

Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community & Engagement Strategist – Pro Video and Audio

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 08, 2024 Jun 08, 2024

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Thanks for the reply! I assume this is for after effects no?

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Adobe Employee ,
Jun 10, 2024 Jun 10, 2024

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Yes, I use the same technique there - unless someone else has ideas. Perhaps it could be done with the Automation Blocks tools, but I'm not sure. @Mathias Moehl may have an idea!

 

Thanks,
Kevin

Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community & Engagement Strategist – Pro Video and Audio

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Community Expert ,
Jun 11, 2024 Jun 11, 2024

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Thanks for pointing me to this @Kevin-Monahan !

We don't have a ready to use tool for exactly this animation in Automation Blocks. But you could, for example, start with our Ken Burns Pan & Zoom tool and change its block code such that it creates the keyframe you want. Most likely, you want to generate one key at the beginning of each clip,which puts the clip entirely left of the visible area and one key at the end, which puts it right of the visible area, such that it scrolls from left to right. However, you need to also overlap the clips somehow, so you need to distribute them along two tracks and make them overlap 50%.

Mathias Möhl - Developer of tools like BeatEdit and Automation Blocks for Premiere Pro and After Effects

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