Click below for additional 
creative capabilities you can achieve with SpiceMaster. 
 Bezier-Controlled 
Fades 
 Beautiful Soft Slide/Zoom/Drop Effects 
 Combined Spice Designs 
 Easily Build Adjustable, Soft Mattes 
 Easy Animation/Distortion/Texture Effects 
 Brewing Your Own Effects for SpiceMaster 
 
Accelerated/Decelerated Fades 
 
With a simple trick, you can 
use SpiceMaster' keyframing to smoothly 
vary a clip's opacity. No spice effect will appear -- just a terrifically smooth 
uniform fade that speeds up or slows down as it progresses. Several 
saved setting files are included for this type of effect. To apply one: 
 
1. After applying SpiceMaster, click the  Click here to load a preset... button. 
 
2. Double-click the Bezier Fades subfolder and click any saved setting file within it. That's all! 
 
Beautiful 
Soft Slide/Zoom/Drop Effects 
 
Unlike what's available in most editing software, a bonus of using SpiceMaster is you can have keyframe-controlled super-softness or opacity in a slide, zoom or drop transition. 
This can dramatically change the character of such 'standard' effects to something 
fresh, elegant and beautiful, as shown below. 
 
   View 
movie at our web site 
 
Several saved settings are provided in SpiceMaster to instantly create such effects! 
Just follow Step 1 above, then choose any saved setting file from the Soft 
Slides or Soft Zooms folder. Note: If you 
prefer an organic zoom edge, instead of a super-soft look, apply one of the above 
saved settings, then reduce the Softness slider(s) and 
experiment with the Texture > Amount slider (and possibly the Invert button). For an animated 
organic edge, also turn on the Texture > Motion slider. 
 
Combined 
Spice Designs 
  
SpiceMaster's Library is loaded with hundreds of spice designs, covering most 
production situations. In addition, the Texture section 
of SpiceMaster can add organic edge qualities to even non-organic spices. And 
you can adjustably zoom any alpha channel graphic or 
black & white matte to create softenable spice-like effects with custom geometries. 
With all of these capabilities, you'll likely always find a suitable design for 
your SpiceMaster effect.  
 
Last but not least, the powerful Mixer control blends 
any chosen spice design with the luminance of your clips, tailoring the effect 
even further to your content. However, 
you have one more nifty way to create additional SpiceMaster effect geometries: apply the SpiceMaster  more than once to a two or more synchronized copies of the same clip to combine spice designs. 
 
  
 
In the example above, the SpiceMaster effect was applied twice to the blue clip, 
to reveal the lower eye clip. All SpiceMaster settings were identical both times 
(OrganicFX\Climatics\Fog2 C spice plus some white 
border), but in one the effect was reversed (by clicking the Invert button in SpiceMaster). Thus the combined effect progresses organically in a new 
way. 
 
Easily 
Build Adjustable, Soft Mattes 
 
Most video editing programs can form simple garbage mattes, 
which can be useful to mask out unwanted areas of a clip, such as static along 
a frame edge, an unwanted region of a scene, an area trailing a title, etc. Usually 
you cannot soften the garbage matte's edges and you are limited to straight-edged 
basic shapes (no curves or unusual/organic shapes). Not anymore! By applying SpiceMaster 
and 'freezing' the progress of a spice effect, you can easily apply softenable 
custom mattes for any purpose. SpiceMaster's Library includes lots of fundamental 
shapes to create mattes in virtually any geometry. All are adjustable for position, 
size, softness, etc. directly in SpiceMaster. 
 
The technique is easy: After applying a SpiceMaster  and selecting a spice file from the Library, choose the 'Hold for entire duration' Progress Preset and adjust that keyframe value up or down to set an iris-size or wipe-position as desired. To further fine-tune the 
matte's position, drag the Spice > Center handle. That's 
all! 
 
To fine-tune the matte's softness, apply Softness 
> All Edges. In addition to softness, most other 
SpiceMaster enhancements in the Edge and Depth pane are available for the matte's edge -- border, glow, shadow, etc. For example, 
if you apply Texture > Motion then you can animate the matte's edge during the 
effect -- cool! 
 
Easy 
Animation/Distortion/Texture Effects 
 
SpiceMaster's numerous controls in the Edge and Depth panes are not only useful to enhance spice effects. They can be applied directly 
to a single clip to produce a huge range of quick and easy animation, distortion, 
and texture effects for you! The technique is easy:  
 
1. Apply 
the SpiceMaster to a Layer in your timeline. 
 
2. Set the Layer control to the same layer SpiceMaster is in.  
 
3. Set up the effect. In the main area of SpiceMaster, click the Choose 
Spice button to select a spice with the effect design you desire. 
 
4. Apply any enhancement from Border, Shadow/Glow, 
or Bevel/Ripple sections of the Edge and Depth panes of SpiceMaster. Modify further if 
desired with the Softness and Texture sections. Instant flowing energy wave! 
 
  
 
Brewing 
Your Own Effects for SpiceMaster 
 
Despite the hundreds of spice files included with SpiceMaster and the near-infinite 
ways to modify and customize them, occasionally you may still want to create your 
own "spice". Perhaps you need an effect that has the exact shape as 
a client's logo or graphic, or some other custom need. Since SpiceMaster is open-ended, 
it will readily accept any still-image as a spice. The file should have a wide 
range of grayscales -- from pure black to pure white -- to create an effect that 
changes over time (such as a transition). Or the file can be a simple black & 
white matte to load and enhance in SpiceMaster. 
 
To create such a custom file, use a graphics program such as Photoshop to (a) 
create the grayscale still-image at the same size as your final output (such as 
1920x1080 pixels), and (b) save the file in any format below. Then load 
the file directly into SpiceMaster. SpiceMaster can load files in the following formats: BITMAP (.bmp or .dib), TIFF (.tif), PNG (.png), PICT (.pct), JPEG (.jpg), and TARGA (.tga). 
        
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