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Creating a Cosmic Zoom in Motion

On this Week's MacBreak Studio

By Mark Spencer | May 28, 2013

This week on MacBreak Studio, I show Steve Martin from Ripple Training how to do a "Cosmic Zoom" effect in Motion.

Inspired by Andrew Kramer's excellent After Effects tutorial on his site Videocopilot.net, I demonstrate how you can achieve a similar result using Motion.

The "Cosmic Zoom" effect involves flying either from out in space all the way to a spot on the earth, or pulling back from a location on earth into space. For the example in this tutorial, I'm using images from Google Maps, but for commercial work, make sure you have the proper rights to the images you use.

The basic process involves first collecting a set of images taken at different distances from the earth (or different zoom levels from the same distance), aligning and nesting them one inside the other, then animated the scale of the overall composition to zoom into or out of the closest point. If you use After Effects, I show the Motion equivalents for such concepts as continuous rasterization, parenting, and precomposing.

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Comments

Max: | February, 28, 2014

Thanks. This is a great tutorial and I especially liked the tip of using a rig to deal with huge ranges.

I wonder though if instead of a feathered mask it might look better to fade each image in as its detail level is required. It seems like that would solve the matching issue a little more cleanly, but I haven’t tried it so maybe not.

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