
Yes, jump and fall, okay? You're with me so far? I'm going to reposition that so it's the same duration as the rest. I think it is the jump and fall behavior, this one right here.

And if you're wondering how that's dropping, once again, it's just a behavior. I'm going to bring it up here and position it so it drops down about right there.

So I have that here, just a screen cap of my recorder. Right after that, we've got this recorder coming down and dropping in front of everything. I've got my images, and I've got my scale down. All right, that's pretty good for now, I can tweak it later, if I need to. And I need to scale it down to fit inside of my canvas, I'm not quite sure what that's going to be, but I'll figure it out. I like to keep things short, when it comes to animations, I'm going to go with like 12 frames. So I'm going to go up here to animations and I'm going to apply a custom animation and let's go with about. And I need to position that so it scales down right about there. Looks like right up after they all scale up, it scales down, so I'm going to bring this here. I'll take a look at that one more time, so I know kind of what the timing is. Okay, so what I need to do is get this group to scale down and fit into there.

There's my images, then I scaled them down into side the Camtasia project, which I've got right here, which really is just a screen cap of a Camtasia project running and then I threw this black shape over it to hide the canvas. Let's take another look here at my final, and see what we did next. All right, you getting it so far? Now, once I've got that, what I want to do is group that whole thing so I can work with it. And then we got the shape, over all of them to kind of hide the overlap. Scale behavior up, all four, and they're offset rather than at the same time. And for each one, I just added a scale behavior and customized it. All I've done is I scaled it to a quarter of the screen and repositioned it like this, put that back, and I added a behavior. You can see without them, it doesn't look quite as cool. I've got these images blowing up to a quarter of the screen, and then they've got this black shape over them to kind of hide the overlaps.

I'm just going to go through a frame at a time. Now, this next section, let's kind of step through this here. It's just a scale down and if you're not familiar with that, you can just go to behaviors here and there's all kinds of behaviors you can use and I just used a scale and customized it. And if you're wondering how I recorded the Camtasia recorder, well I used Camtasia eight to record Camtasia nine. It's just a screen cap, and then we have a scale down here. Now disclaimer, it may not come out quite the same as the original but I think you'll get the idea as we progress through it. All right, now what I've done over here further on the timeline is break it all apart, and then I'm going to rebuild it so you can see exactly what I did. I've got groups, inside of groups, inside of groups. So what I'm going to do is come over here and we're going to pop this open and take a look under the hood. Okay, this may seem complicated and crazy, but it's really just several simple animations stacked on top of each other and working together. With a bit of foresight and creativity, you can add some pretty eye-grabbing movements to your Camtasia project, using transitions, behaviors, and custom animations.
