Doodly Advanced Tutorial

Slide In Reveal Method

Advanced Tutorial #26

Slide In Reveal

Weโ€™ve all seen the exit animation for transitioning to another scene where the objects seamlessly fly off the canvas. This article teaches you how to create that same effect when introducing your assets.

Note: This effect works within limitations of Doodly. Doodly natively supports only two options for this effect. Natively we can do just the first asset or all assets at once for the desired effect introduced to the scene using a whiteboard or solid color background as long as there are not other stationary assets already on the canvas. We can use other advanced techniques to provide an individual swipe in effect for each asset, if desired.

Prerequisites


Grid Usage

Requirements


Green Screen and Masking

For a single scene individual asset slide in effect.

Preparation

We are using the Pan and Zoom for this effect. Pan and zoom does not have a grid, snapping or any other type of aligning tools available to us so we need to manually align everything. Use the SoloBoss asset alignment tool as a background image for the custom canvas to assist with this task.

All the Doodly provided assets are Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG). They can be resized without losing quality of the image. This trick makes use of the SVG architecture and the unlock start option in the Doodly Pan and Zoom feature.

There are 2 main issues that are addressed with creating this effect.

  1. In order to get the panning option, we must lower the size of the viewable canvas inside the pan and zoom. This means resizing the the assets within that canvas.

  2. When we increase the viewable size of the canvas back to full screen, the assets will appear much smaller so we must resize them and move them into the correct location. We use the grid and snap to grid feature to solve this issue.

Creating the Fly-In Swiping Action

This requires 2 scenes.
First Scene: Asset Movement

Second Scene: Resizing the Asset

Advanced Technique for Individual Slides

We can create a single scene where all the assets individually slide out by using green screen techniques and matching them up in a separate video editor.

About the author

Tutorial author Wayne Leiser smiling and looking away from the camera

Wayne Leiser has created free and accessible photo editing tutorials. Drawing on over 25 years of design and IT experience, his lessons begin with the universal basics, progressing through beginner, intermediate, and advanced skill levels using Photopea, a free online Photoshop clone. His goal is to provide users with practical skills for financial independence, with a focus on making money online through the SoloBoss profit sharing video platform.