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These 40 animated elements will help you add a high technology look to any interface or panel display, whether real or imagined. They can also help polish any video production with elements you can't find anywhere else – whether it's sweeping radar screens, simulated fingerprint and voice analyzers, rotating sonar equipment displays and animated pie charts -- or blinking flow charts, flashing network diagrams, simulated bio data and file loading/saving bars.
Fill empty screens in your latest video production with active realistic content or liven up a DVD full of data by complementing it with some information processing graphics on your menus. Base the logo of a travel documentary on one of the global radar simulations or start a new IT show open with high tech titles based on active data transfer diagrams and flow charts. This is just the animated graphics resource for which you have been searching.
Features
- 40 Animations on DVD-ROM
- Full printed index
- Average length 1-5 seconds
- QuickTime® format
- 1080 x 1080 to 1920 x 1080 at 60 fps
- Juicer 3 resizes to NTSC D1, DV, PAL & more
- Juicer 3 uses an advanced algorithm to scale to PAL & NTSC
Revealing the Expanding Universe
Digital Juice's collection of animated graphics for television is becoming more and more specialized as time goes on. Starting with Jump Backs animated backgrounds and continuing through our Editor's Toolkits, the variety of animations we offer includes lots of different backgrounds, transitions and overlays. Motion Design Elements were introduced in the Editor's Toolkit 2 and are a special type of overlay that continues to make that particular volume very popular. Motion Design Elements (MDEs) are isolated elements with alpha channel transparency that work with other onscreen graphics and draw attention to them. For example, MDEs are commonly used to add color, motion and sparkle behind what would otherwise be a static logo or station ID tag. Drop a small MDE animation behind a small logo in the corner of the screen and you can draw the viewer's attention to it quite effectively.
What if we put that MDE on top of the logo, instead of behind it? Of course it would obscure the logo, which defeats the entire purpose of even having a logo on the screen in the first place. But what if we animated the MDE to fade in, cut the logo in behind it and then animated the MDE out? The flash of color and motion in the corner of the screen would draw the viewer's eyes and then reveal the logo. In its simplest form, that is what our new Revealers are for. Revealers come in all sorts of new patterns and designs that let you creatively bring text and logos onto the screen with flare, panache and sophistication.
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