Add Transitions and Animations and Watch in Preview

In this video, you will add transitions and animations to create visual effects in your presentation.

Transitions are visual effects that play between slides as you move through your presentation.

This makes your presentation more visually interesting for your audience as you move from slide to slide.

Animations are visual effects on a “single” slide.

Animations make objects, like text, images, and shapes, move across the slide one by one, to make your presentation unique and dynamic.

Using animations also allows you to introduce text and other elements gradually, rather than all at once.

That way, your audience can focus on one point at a time as you present.

To start, select your first slide.

Add a transition to the slide...

and adjust the speed.

Test the transition by selecting “play”.

To edit the transition, select “stop”.

Experiment with different transitions to make your presentation more interesting.

Create new transitions for every slide, “or” use the same transition for every slide in the presentation.

Using all the same transitions across your project will make the presentation appear more unified and coherent.

Next, choose an object in your presentation to animate, like a text box.

Add an animation to your object.

Arrange the animation so that each item appears “by paragraph”, to show different lines of the text each time you click.

Set the animation to play when you click the mouse or press a button on the keyboard.

Or, select “after previous” to make the animation run automatically.

Finally, preview your presentation in presenter view to see your transitions and animations in action.

Now, it’s your turn: Add a transition between two slides Apply your transition to all slides, Add animations to one slide, and Preview your presentation.

INSTRUCTIONS

  1. Add a transition between two slides.
  2. Apply your transition to all slides.
  3. Add animations to one slide.
  4. Preview your presentation.


This content is from Google and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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