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I'm trying to create a new title template. I can do the text and all that but when I import a background that has an oval but with a transparent background saved as a .png, the oval shows just fine but the background is white.
I'm following instructions on how to create a transparent background with Photosuite.
I just want to create a title with the oval and some text over it and have a transparent background.
Hi, GoodGuy309!
The oval shape you wish to superimpose on your video, behind your title, will appear with the white background blocking out the "scene" whether it's PNG, JPG or BMP. In order to make the white area "transparent", before you add your titles, with your oval shape highlighted, click on "modify", you should then get the "chroma-key" option, which is enabled by clicking in the little square above it. when activated, click on the pippet(eye-dropper) and hold it over the white area of your image, click there and the white area then becomes transparent. I've tried using a PNG image I created myself, after being advised to do so in another post some time ago, I was led to believe that, in the PNG image, the white area would be "automatically" transparent. This turned out
not to be the case. I found myself still having to use the chroma-key to make the white area in my overlay transparent. After that exercise, I went back to creating my overlays in bitmap(BMP). I found BMP to work much better for sharp detail than PNG or JPG. Thus I now use BMP exclusively for that purpose. I produce my own titling for some of my videos using the WordArt feature in Microsoft Publisher, copying it and pasting it to Microsoft's Paint programme. Should I want to create a background shape(of any description) I can do that in Publisher, or more directly in Paint, then import the image into Power Director, drop it onto a PiP track and set the chroma-key to knock out the white background(make it transparent), and hey presto, I have an arrow, oval or any other shape I want, in any colour I want.
Your blue "oval" I take it, was your own creation, made for the purpose of a backdrop to your title. Again, with "home-made" PNG image files, the white background does not "automatically" become transparent and still requires chroma-key to make it so. That's been my experience and is the reason why I no longer use or trust the PNG image file type.
Cheers!
Neil.