Motion tween animation options
Here, I will show you how to change the shape of a Movie Clip in a Motion
Tween animation, its tint, transparency, brightness, position, rotation and all
these things combined.
1. Open a new Flash document. Draw something with
at least three colors, and that is assymetrical (i.e. don't draw a single-color
circle or rectangle). Select your drawing (all of it, don't leave any part
unselected!) with the Selection Tool (V) and convert it to a
Movie Clip symbol by pressing F8 (or choosing Modify
> Convert to Symbol).
2. Create a Motion Tween animation: in the Timeline panel,
place mouse over a frame, let's say frame 30 for example, right-click on it and
choose Insert Keyframe from the pop-up menu. Next, right click
on any one frame between the first and the second keyframe, and choose
Create Motion Tween from the pop-up menu. If you are not
familiar with all this, I suggest you see the Basic
Motion Tween Animation tutorial before you continue.
3. Move the pink playhead on the timeline to the second
keyframe you just created. Select your Movie Clip on the stage by clicking on it
once. Look at the Properties panel, situated below the scene.

On the left side of the panel, you can see the nice icon which is showing
that the selected object on the stage is a Movie Clip. There is a drop-down menu
showing the same and with some other options which go beyond the scope of this
tutorial. The same goes for the input text field below the drop-down menu
(Instance Name). In the section below the icon are the width and height of our
Movie Clip (in pixels), and the coordinates of its position on the stage (in
pixels also).
To the right, you can see the "Instance of" followed by the name you gave
your Movie Clip when you created it. Below, there is a button used for swapping
your symbol. Let's leave it for now.
4. Let's go to the right side of the Properties panel, where
there is a menu named Color that interests us. Click on it. The
options shown are None, Brightness,
Tint, Alpha and Advanced.
Choose the first one, Brightness.
You will see a new option appear to the right of our menu. You can either
enter a percentage in the small input text field or move the handle on the right
to adjust the value. A positive value means a brighter Movie Clip, with 100% as
the brightest option - completely white. A negative value chosen produces a
darker Movie Clip, with -100% as completely black.
Choose, for example, 80%. Press CTRL+ENTER or choose
Control > Test Movie to test your Flash movie and see the
animated change of brightness. You can experiment with other options, too. They
won't be added together. That is, if you select Tint now, the
Brightness option is reset back to zero. Alpha
is changing the transparency of the Movie Clip. The Advanced
option is for setting both the change in color and transparency at the same
time. Let's move and transform our object now. You can leave Alpha, Tint, or
whatever you chose before, it can be combined with movement and
transformation.
5. Using the
Selection Tool (V) or the arrow keys on the keyboard move the
Movie Clip on a new position on the stage. Test your movie, if you want, by
pressing CTRL+ENTER. Now, to transform our object, select the
Free Transform Tool (Q) from the Tools panel. If your Movie
Clip is still selected, you will see a black frame appear around it, with
handles on corners and between them. If not, select it. Now, if you move the
cursor over the corner, it will change its appearance to a two pointed arrow.
Click and drag, and you will change the width and height of the Movie Clip. If
you want to change it proportionally, hold the SHIFT key while
dragging.
If you move the cursor a little bit away from the corner, it will change to a
round arrow. Click and drag, and you change the rotation of your object. Holding
SHIFT restricts the rotation to 45 degrees. Still another
option is to bring the cursor between two black handles. Click and drag, and you
skew your Movie Clip.
Got any comments or questions? Want to add something but don't
know how? Discuss it in the forum!
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