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Hello!
I am using the transform effect for minor animations because of its motion blur abilities when using shutter angle. Lately however it seems like the shutter angle is messing with the positioning of the anchor point or something like that.
For example I wanted an image to rotate a couple times around its own midpoint like a wheel, this worked perfectly fine, then I adjusted the shutter angle to simulate motion blur and all of a sudden the image is rotating around a point somewhere just offscreen.
The same thing happened when I did only a small scale animation, I made an image pop out a bit by having the scale increase in a short amount of time, then I adjust the shutter angle and now it doesn't pop out of its own middle but from some angle in the screen.
The amount of shutter angle does not matter, it either does not happen when it's off or happens all the way when either barely or fully adjusted.
Am I goofing? or is this not supposed to happen? Any advice is appreciated!!
Its incredible - this issue hasnt been fixed for 4 years. Nesting is a disturbing work around that harms the workflow. Adobe please fix a basic effect that hasnt been working for 4 years...
Picture 1 and two demomstrates the position of the emoji where the only difference is a shutter angle on 50 on picture 2, which for some annoying reason completely misplaces the emoji to some random place instead of the center
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alright!!
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"It's not a bug in the software; it is a feature of the way the Transform tool works. Recently, I was working on a 1080p timeline and added an 8K clip. I wanted to zoom in and out on a specific part and also add motion blur. When I added keyframes for scale, everything looked fine. However, when I added a shutter angle, the clip's position got messed up.
The reason is the anchor point. The anchor point is the center of the clip, and different resolutions have different anchor points. You just need to set the anchor point of your clip to match the anchor point of your timeline. For example, the anchor point of an 8K clip is (3840, 2160), and for a 1080p timeline, it is (960, 540). Replace the anchor point numbers of your clip with the anchor point numbers of your timeline.
Then, change the position of the clip to center it, but do not change the position using the same Transform effect. Instead, change the position value from the Motion tab at the top of the Effect Controls panel. You can also add another Transform effect, but make sure to place this new Transform effect before the main Transform effect where you changed the anchor point."