How to Make Cool Photo Effects in PowerPoint – PowerPoint Picture Tutorial




Here is another PowerPoint Photo Design and Animation tutorial that I hope will fuel your creativity. Get the free download files of the photos used here: https://nutsandboltsspeedtraining.com/ppt-cool-photo-effects/

These techniques can really make any presentation or document stand out. Of course, I’m sure you guys can come up with much better designs – would love to see your ideas. Enjoy!

► Download the sample file: https://nutsandboltsspeedtraining.com/ppt-cool-photo-effects/

⚑ SUBSCRIBE: http://Bit.Ly/Spicy-YouTube-Subscribe

► Grab 4 Free Lessons From My Spicy Animations Course http://bit.ly/PPT-Animations-Mini-Course

► Get the Slides from My YouTube Tutorials http://bit.ly/Spicy-Slides

► Follow me on Twitter (if you want to hear from me more often)! http://bit.ly/FollowSpice

► For truly mind-blowing PowerPoint hacks and shortcuts, check out this free PowerPoint “speed course” from my friends Taylor and Camille of Nuts & Bolts Speed Training: http://bit.ly/PPT-Hacks-Mini-Course

Original source


35 responses to “How to Make Cool Photo Effects in PowerPoint – PowerPoint Picture Tutorial”

  1. Your videos are very helpful.You motivate me and my students to like power point. We cant help but to be amazed with the things you can do with Power Point. Thank you very much!

  2. Hello, Let me tell you that your expositions are outstanding, yesterday I was trying to convert a picture into puzzel pieces because I am doing a video and I want to include this effect, I have learned how to do the puzzel pieces following the instructions in other videos that I had seen, but they did no explained how to separate the pieces of the puzzel, i had tried several form and no results, until I remembered that you have a video in which you separate the different parts of a photo so I apply the same principles to my picture and the result were OK, themk you very much for helping me to create my puzzel.

  3. What speed are you using?! I was galloping and still could not keep up running it back and forth, back and forth. Guess I am not as savvy as the others who have comments because I give up. I know it is something I would like to learn but for one thing no matter if I enlarge the video or keep it small I have no idea most of the time from where your tools are chosen. Maybe some day you will make one for us gray hairs who walk slower 🙂

  4. Thanks @PowerPoint Spice for this cool & awesome video. I think this one is amazing & non comparative to any other effect. Please keep posting. Am looking forward to watch some other creative videos from your side.

  5. This is has been one of the coolest thing I've seen so far in here, working with PP. Thanks…Oh! by the way, yeah, I noticed that too, A little bit to fast and also didn't see where were you clicking at, sometimes.

  6. Four rectangles for a frame??? Resizing one of the rectangles to simulate a Polaroid shape? Duplicate the base photo and crop it over and over? Frames and frames? Mask and masks? For a final static photos simulation?

    What about this?

    1. Insert "your" base photo, place it wherever you want in a slide. Save the slide as a picture. Then format/fill your "next" slide background with that picture.

    2. Insert/Shape/Rectangle, edit size as you want, right click over it and "Format/Shape/Fill/Slide background fill" – it will assume any background area over which it is placed, as fill.

    3. Duplicate the filled rectangle, on the "Drawing Tools" tab "Format/Edit shape/Change shape/(choose) Frame", "Shape fill (White?)", "Bring to front",
    For the Polaroid shape frame, do as above, right click over the "frame" shape and "Edit Points"!

    4. Select both shapes, center align and group them. Insert a rectangle (fill it with the color of your choice), resize it to cover all background and "Send to Back".

    5. Duplicate the framed "photo" group, as many times you want and place the duplicates wherever you want, rotate it distort it, whatever you want to do, you'll always see that specific background area behind it.

    It's easier, faster and more accurate and… way faster than it took to write!

    Note: it won't work for animated shapes – they'll "grab" and keep the initial area fill.

  7. Wow! As a dedicated Macintosh person, I generally avoid Microsoft products, evil empire sort of feelings…..but Keynote as taken an unfortunate turn on the last upgrade and I find myself looking at Power Point with more appreciation. Big question for the day….."does the Macintosh version of Powerpoint 2013 have the same features and abilities as the PC version of PP?" or do I have to abandon my IMAC?

  8. Great videos.  I'd like to have a picture of flowers in a field, and the flowers jump up out of the field, one at a time.  The flower jumps up and then back down into the field as another flower jumps up, then down, etc.  Can you help?  Or can you recommend a search phrase?  I saw this in a presentation a while ago.  Thank you!  I'll keep watching!

Leave a Reply