Clearly the image is the same, just shifted a little to the left, so that it moves slightly during the morph transition. The second slide has the image, the ‘or not to be’ text, and an orange box. The question is how do you do it? The first slide has the image, the ‘to be’ text and a grey box. To be, or, not to be… That though, is not the question. Here for example, we have the start of a classic Shakespearean quote, brought to life. But the first thing to consider is that it’s not just about the content on your slide. With Morph, you can do some pretty exciting things. Changing perspectives – off-slide content Magic!Ĭheck out our beginner’s guide for more in-depth instructions on how to get started.
So, for example, if you have a box on the left-hand side of one slide, and then duplicate the slide and move the box to the right-hand side on the second, by applying the morph transition (in the Transition tab, in the ribbon) in slide show mode the box will automatically move from the left to the right, with no need for any animation.īetter yet, if you resize the box or recolour it, then the morph transition will seamlessly alter the box to move it, resize it, and change its colour. Morph works across two slides, recognizes any objects that are on both and seamlessly transitions from one slide to the next.
The new morph transition in PowerPoint is pretty cool. Saving you from all sorts of time-consuming activities and other perils.īut what is morph? I’ve been banging on about it and not actually introduced it. Welcome to the playground of my imagination! In this post we look at the mind-bending world of Morph and how to use it create stunning design effects in PowerPoint.