Quantcast

Special Sponsored Section


The video player requires Flash 8 Player or later. Please download the latest Flash Player.


Maclife Hottest Articles
Thumbnail
FEATURE
100 Snow Leopard Tips, Tricks, and Features
Browser
FEATURE
OS X Browser Speed Wars: May the Fastest App Win
iTunes History
FEATURE
The Complete iTunes History -- SoundJam MP to iTunes 9
iTunes Tips
FEATURE
iTunes 9 Tips and Tricks - Solve the Mysteries of the New iTunes

Create Screencasts Using ScreenFlow
Posted 09/05/2008 at 10:53:53am | by Steve Paris

6. “You Can Edit That Out, Right?”

Click to embiggen.

You might decide to edit out the first few seconds of your screencast, especially if they just show you getting ready. To do this, look at the Timeline section, at the bottom of the interface. On the far left is a red line with a triangular-shaped object above it. This is the playhead. 

Click the red triangle and drag it to the right to move the playhead along. Place it just before the moment when something interesting happens. Next, move the cursor to the beginning of the video clip. It changes to a resize tool. Click on it and drag it to the right to trim that clip. As it nears the playhead, it will snap to it, facilitating the edit process.

 

7. Changing the Focus

Click to embiggen.

To focus on another area of the screen after a time, move the playhead to another point in time. Go to Actions > Add Video Action. A thin purple rectangle appears to the left of the playhead (you can resize it by dragging its edges; it turns yellow when selected). With the playhead set at the end of this action, move the clip in the Preview window or resize it to display another area. The longer the action, the slower the move will take.

 

8. Show Me the Mousing

Click to embiggen.

You can also make your mouse clicks visible. Move the playhead to a desired location. To the right of the interface are a series of tabs. Select the third one from the left, and click the button that reads Add Screen Recording Action.

Change the Click Effect pull-down menu to Radar. You can tell ScreenFlow to use a sound effect on each click, and even have any keys you pressed appear on screen —useful if you used any keyboard shortcuts.

 

9. Put a Face on It

Click to embiggen.

You can add an additional clip at any time, so we’ll record one using the iSight. Go to File > Add Additional Recording. Deselect the Record Desktop and Record Computer Audio options, and instead choose Record Video From Built-in iSight and Record Audio From Built-In Microphone. Click the Record button at the bottom-right of that window.

 

10. Talking Heads

Click to embiggen.

We’ll be recording a video voiceover to add to our demonstration, so play the existing footage back, making sure your Mac is mute. You will not see yourself as the recording happens, but the little green light next to your iSight will show that everything is working as it should. Stop the recording, and a new clip appears in the Media List on the right side of the interface.

 

11. All Together Now

Click to embiggen.

Drag that clip from the top right to the Timeline. As you do, a new video layer is created. Hold down the Shift key and click and drag one of the new clip’s corner handles to resize it in order to see both recordings at the same time, one on top of the other. Under the Video Properties tab (first on the left), you can even rotate your clip in 3D by changing the Y Rotation angle.

 

12. Export It

Click to embiggen.

To prepare your file for the web, go to File > Export. Change the Preset to Web - High (Best Quality). Since we already reduced our canvas’s size, click Scale To Custom Size—this will select the current canvas dimension. To make the movements across your screen look a little more realistic, you could select the Use Motion Blur option, but bear in mind that this will greatly lengthen your export process. When ready, click Export.

COMMENTS: 0
TAGS:  ScreenFlow, how-to
COMMENTS