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Adding multiple photos to one frame

I am creating a wedding video using iMovie 6 and I would like to add more than one photo per frame. What are my options? I appreciate your help.

Mac OS X (10.4.9)

Posted on May 27, 2007 8:44 PM

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6 replies

May 27, 2007 8:54 PM in response to movierookie

Welcome to the forums.

iMovie's a great choice for long slideshows and combining video and stills - perfect for a wedding. If your question is how can two pictures show at the same time -- a couple options are to combine them before bringing them into iMovie (eg, use Photoshop Elements) or look around for an iMovie plugin that will do this for you (there are several companies that make these plugins).

Multiple pictures are a step up from basics -- you might be interested in obtaining one of David Pogue's "Missing Manual" series for many helpful hints and creative ideas.
John

May 27, 2007 9:06 PM in response to movierookie

Hi Movierookie - welcome to the iMovie Discussions!
cf/x make some neat little plug-ins, one of which is Picture-in-Clip (static) which will do what you want. There is also one for multiple images - see here:
http://www.imovieplugins.com/
and here:
http://www.imovieplugins.com/fxhome.html
(not sure about how serious the incompatibility is with this latter one)
User uploaded file

Jul 9, 2007 4:11 AM in response to movierookie

Here is how I do it using Quicktime Pro:

Organize the video clips and/or stills that you want to superimpose on to your main video clip, by having these in separate, individual iMovie projects (no matter how small). It helps if these are in the exact length/time you want later.

Now start with the clip in your iMovie project on to which you want to superimpose one of more smaller video clips or stills. Lets call it Main Clip. Export this (share) to Quicktime Pro in DV (full quality). make sure it has the same aspect as before (Quicktime tends to default to 4:3. If you want 16:9, read on).

In Quicktime, with this project open, select File ~ Open File. Select the iMovie file (in your movies folder) of the first clip/still you want superimposed. This will open in its own QT window. Select Edit ~ copy. If it is a movie clip then select all ~ copy (or you will only get one frame!). Switch back to the Main Clip window, and click in the scroll bar where you want the extra clip/still to appear. Choose Edit ~ Add to Movie.

You can repeat this as many times as you like, if you want to build a 'Video Wall', i.e. have several superimposed clips/stills on the same Main Clip.

Do not worry that the new clip overlaps or covers up the Main Clip, at this stage.

Choose Window ~ Show Movie Properties. The Properties Dialogue appears.

You will see a list of video (and audio) tracks. Track one will be the Main Clip, track 2 your new added (superimposed) clip. Click track 2, then click visual settings. From the Scaled Size pop-op menu, choose percent. Then type 50 into the first box. If Preserve Aspect Ratio is turned on you won't need to type 50 into the second box. You have made the pasted footage appear at one quarter its original size. The inset is now hugging the top-left corner of the Main Clip. If you want, you can type numbers into the Offset Boxes to shove it away from that corner (there are 72 pixels to the inch).

If your original Main Clip was required in 16:9, unclick (de-select) Preserve Aspect Ratio, and type in the relevant numbers in the two boxes, in Video Track 1.

PAL (for Europe):

Standard DV (4:3) 788 x 576
DV Widescreen (16:9) 1050 x 576

NTSC (for the USA):

Standard DV (4:3) 720 x 528
DV Widescreen (16:9) 874 x 480

This will not affect video track 2, but if that is also wanted in 16:9 repeat for that track.

You can superimpose, 3, 4, or more such 'overlaps' on the same clip, and spend a happy afternoon tapping away for each track in the Offset Boxes until you have got them all in the right place! You can even overlap them, if you can remember (or note down - hire a secretary to take notes) which track you want on top etc.

Save the completed QT file. Import the completed file into a new iMovie project. Import this into the original iMovie project, substituting the old clip you copied to QT as Main Clip for the new fancy clip you have made.

Have fun!

Adding multiple photos to one frame

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