A new feature in Keynote lets you easily place an animated dynamic background behind your slides. You can customize them with your own colors, sizes and movement.
Want to know more about how to use Keynote on your Mac? Check out this MacMost course!
Comments: 5 Responses to “New Dynamic Backgrounds With Mac Keynote”
Juris Ozols
2 years ago
Gary - Very nice tutorial, appreciate it as always. Question - is there some way to add some text, make it transparent, and mask out the rest of the slide so that the dynamic background is only visible through the text part?
Juris: Not that I can think of offhand. You could do it by building that graphic in a graphics app like Pixelmator or Photoshop, and then just covering the slide with it.
Juris Ozols
2 years ago
Yep, that works fine with Photoshop, creating a png image with a solid background and a transparent hole. Also, playing around with PS Chroma Keying plus the Keynote dynamic backgrounds exported to movies can make for some intriguing effects. Thank you, sir!
Troy
2 years ago
Hi Gary,
Is it possible to create a dynamic background in Keynote and export it to PDF and have that PDF show the movement? When exported the pdf becomes still. I am making a cover for work for a lookbook I share with clients.
Thanks,
Gary - Very nice tutorial, appreciate it as always. Question - is there some way to add some text, make it transparent, and mask out the rest of the slide so that the dynamic background is only visible through the text part?
Juris: Not that I can think of offhand. You could do it by building that graphic in a graphics app like Pixelmator or Photoshop, and then just covering the slide with it.
Yep, that works fine with Photoshop, creating a png image with a solid background and a transparent hole. Also, playing around with PS Chroma Keying plus the Keynote dynamic backgrounds exported to movies can make for some intriguing effects. Thank you, sir!
Hi Gary,
Is it possible to create a dynamic background in Keynote and export it to PDF and have that PDF show the movement? When exported the pdf becomes still. I am making a cover for work for a lookbook I share with clients.
Thanks,
Troy
Troy: No. PDFs don't really support animation.