4 effects, Preliminar y preliminar y – Analog Way Ascender 48 User Manual
Page 51

PRELIMINAR
Y
PRELIMINAR
Y
51
7.4.3 Effects
Use the Transparency to give at your layer a transparent effect, all
layers behind it, will appear less or more giving the transparency value.
Cropping
The Cropping feature allows you to cut into the image the part you don’t
want. Simply increase the size horizontally or vertically and then adjust
the position to display only the desired content. This crop is a layer crop,
all inputs affected to this layer will be cropped.
Position/Size
Adjust the size horizontally (X) or vertically (Y), then adjust the width
and the height of your layer. You can use the cursor or directly enter a
value. To keep the aspect ratio by using the cursor, please enable the
KEEP ASPECT RATIO button. You will find it on the right of the width and
height cursors.
Transparency
Borders
Borders can be chosen between 4 patterns:
EDGE
,
SMOOTH
,
SMOOTH
EDGE
or
SHADOW
. For each pattern you will have specific values
to adjust like colors, transparency, width/height or position V and
position H.
Transitions
On the Transitions section, you can filter which transitions you want to
see. For example Slide, Wipe, Circle or Stretch transitions.
Each layer can be defined by an opening and a closing transition. The
opening effect will be applied when the layer switch from a source to
another or when the layer is not present on the screen and appears.
To set up the duration of the transition, please see below the timing and
duration settings. If you want to force the layer to go out of the screen,
see FORCE TRANSITION into the next page.
A lot of transition effects are available, each effect is affected to a layer, every layer can have a specific effect.
H&V Flip
The H&V Flip rotates the PIP on a horizontal or vertical axe. All
data will be flipped.
Force transition
The Force Transition button disables the switch between two
sources into the same layers. Enabling the Force Transition, it
forces the layer to go out and then go in with the desired effect
instead of mixing directly the two sources.
7.4.3 Effects