![]() ![]() If you want to “un-zoom,” just place a duplicate of the first slide after the animation and apply another Morph transition. Sit back and watch PowerPoint take over and provide the zoom-in effect without any blurring or pixelization. You’ve got only one more click at this point, and that is to apply the Morph transition to the second slide. Select the bottom image and lower the brightness using the Format Picture tools to de-emphasize it. Using the Crop tool, crop the topmost image to reveal just the part that you want to highlight.ĭuplicate the entire slide and then on the second slide, apply a large drop shadow to the cropped image and enlarge it. Once you have your image on the slide, duplicate it using Command/Ctrl+D (or any other method) and layer the second image directly on top of the first. If you have a big native table or other block of text in PowerPoint, you can copy it, choose Edit > Paste Special, and paste it as an image. You’ll first want your document to be an actual image. ![]() I’ll show you how to do this in PowerPoint, but the same technique can be used in Keynote using the Magic Move transition. Here’s a simple technique to do just that while zooming in and highlighting the most important part of that item. But occasionally, you do need to show an actual document or even a detailed table in a live presentation. ![]() We always recommend keeping the content on any slide to an amount that can read at a glance by an audience so that they can return their attention to you, the speaker. ![]()
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