On my DPS Wishlist: Playing with Liquid Lay-outs in InDesign (IE: making one layout for iPad Landscape, Portrait and iPhone).

shark vs the universe
Game of Thrones Daily

JBB: An Artblog!
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Sade Olutola

oozey mess
h
will byers stan first human second
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Cosimo Galluzzi
almost home
KIROKAZE

★

Origami Around

Andulka
dirt enthusiast
d e v o n
NASA

No title available
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Italy

seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia
seen from India
seen from New Zealand
seen from Spain

seen from Singapore
seen from Lebanon
seen from Ukraine
seen from Türkiye

seen from Austria
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
@postartifact
On my DPS Wishlist: Playing with Liquid Lay-outs in InDesign (IE: making one layout for iPad Landscape, Portrait and iPhone).
Incredible essay from 2011 by Craig Mod, an ex-Flipboard designer who worked on Flipboard for iPhone. Also served as inpiration for the title of this Tumblr.
The best resource for documented and undocumented stuff you can do with Adobe DPS, by Johannes Henseler a.k.a. @Frischmilch.
In a previous post I described how I tried to make a cover animation. After this I found a new way to make this animation: an embedded HTML5 animation, created with Adobe Edge: Animate. This handy guide explains the whole proces of creating something in Adobe Edge: Animate and then importing it in InDesign.
The proces was straightforward and fast. The benefits are:
Reduced file size (a total of 1.1MB)
No need to render a video
Fast implementation in InDesign
Easy to tweak and update
Adobe Edge: Animate works almost the same as Flash.
The downside is:
It's still not supersmooth
Between the placeholder and the animation, it briefly shows a white frame.
For the cover of a digital magazine I want to pan (automatically) a panorama and then dissolve in a badge. For the animation I want to ease it in and ease it out. I spent a lot of time making this video animation. I tried the following:
Keynote: Used Magic Move to transition from the left to the right of the image, then exported the Keynote as a Quicktime video. Result: Video with an annoying jitter and a big filesize
Tried different export options with Keynote, but the jitter didn't go away.
iMovie: Could not use iMovie, because it doesn't support custom file sizes.
Final Cut Pro: Also doesn't support custom file sizes out of the box, but it does when using this workaround. Aborted the FCP effort, because I could only find the option to scale the source image by hand.
Flash: Creating the tween was easy, although I could only find an option to ease in OR ease out (not both). But the end result still wasn't smooth.
The preview in this video is reduced filesize version (using Quicktime Pro 7) of a Keynote export. The linked video is 4.4MB, which is reasonable.
What I could still try is After Effects, or make a screen recording of the Keynote.