Blog2021-05-06T12:54:43-07:00

Happy New Year PowerPoint Animation

This is the final day in the studio for us before 2017 begins! Many thanks to Wanda on the TLC Creative design team for creating this fun Happy New Year PowerPoint animation!

[KGVID]https://thepowerpointblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/unnamed-file-1.mp4[/KGVID]

The presentation is a single slide with many layers of custom images, music and SFX embedded, and lots of PowerPoint animation.

New Year PowerPoint Animation

Editable PowerPoint slide can be downloaded here.

– Troy  @ TLC

By |December 30th, 2016|PowerPoint|

Green Screen Holiday Greeting (fun)

Christmas Greetings from Troy and Lori of TLC Creative Services, Inc. Many thanks to the Video Resources team for letting us jump in and make a fun Christmas greeting in their very cool green screen studio!

[KGVID]https://thepowerpointblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/unnamed-file-4.mp4[/KGVID]

 

– Troy @ TLC 

By |December 28th, 2016|Personal|

The 2016 TLC Team PowerPoint Holiday Animation!

Each year, everyone on the TLC Creative Design Team has a lot of fun creating an amazing holiday animation entirely in PowerPoint. Here is our 2016 edition!

[iframe src=”https://www.screencast.com/users/TLCCreative/folders/Christmas Animations/media/431d1842-dcfd-44dc-a2bb-0e50e73df05b/embed” width=”640″ height=”360″]

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You can see a number of our past year animation compilations here.

Holiday Animation

– Troy @ TLC

 

By |December 26th, 2016|Resource/Misc|

Modern Design in 2017

My fellow Microsoft MVP and presentation trainer, Ellen Finkelstein made a post entitled “10 Tips for Modern Design in 2017” (see post here). She then organized a blog roundup on the same topic.

modern design in 2017

Here is the TLC Creative Services list of Modern Design Trends we see for 2017:

  • More Motion:

    Morph has simplified adding complex animation to presentations and allowed a greater number of users to now add motion to their slides without investing hours into a single slide.

  • Color Blocks:

     We see a merging of flat design (no bevel, reflection, etc.) and a move away from textures and gradients to the use of large color blocks as the accent graphics and layout framing devices.

  • More Visual Layouts

    Even if not used, the addition of Designer in PowerPoint (see post here for review), is raising awareness of how slide layouts can be improved over simple (and often boring) bullet lists. For years, TLC Creative has developed what we call “Visual Layouts” for bullet list slides, and we are excited to see more awareness and requests for more professional slide designs in 2017.

  • More Navigation:

    PowerPoint has always had Custom Shows, but they are tedious to setup. With the addition of Zoom, setting up elegant non-linear navigation is much cleaner and intuitive.

  • Better Organization:

    Sections have been available sense PowerPoint 2010, but only recently have we seen more presentations leveraging the Sections tool. The small feature improvements, such as ability to copy a Section and its slides to another presentation, are making Sections a more powerful and flexible tool to use.

  • More Vector:

    Vector graphics, those that can be resized without quality loss and modified using PowerPoint’s fill-outline-styling tools, will get a huge boost with the new .SVG file format support (look for a full blog post series on SVG later this month!).

– Troy @ TLC

By |December 23rd, 2016|Resource/Misc|

Save AND Apply PowerPoint Chart Styles

Formatting the visual styling of charts can be… tedious. When a presentation has a number of charts, all needing the same visual styling, saving a chart template can be a huge time saver!

  1. Format a chart with all of the visual styling. Here is the sample stylized chart for this tutorial.
  2. Right click the chart and select SAVE AS TEMPLATE

  3. In the SAVE CHART TEMPLATE dialog, give the chart template a (short) name that helps identify the styling (ie. project name, type of chart, colors used, etc.). The Chart Template is automatically saved into the Microsoft/Templates/Charts folder (and must be in this folder for PowerPoint to use it).
  4. To apply the chart template styling to a chart, select a chart, right click and select CHANGE CHART TYPE
  5. In the Charts dialog, select TEMPLATES and the custom template to apply
  6. Click OK and done!

 

Here is an unformatted chart.

And here is the same chart with the above chart template (4 clicks and formatted!).

NOTES:

  • Chart Templates are local to a computer, they DO NOT travel with a presentation.
  • Chart Template thumbnails are very limited in the visual and description, so if you have many it can be difficult to tell them apart.
  • Right-click to Save Template was introduced with an Office365 PowerPoint 2016 update, I have not tested in previous versions. 

 

Troy @ TLC

By |December 21st, 2016|Tutorial|
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