Say hello to the slickest PowerPoint animations you’ve ever seen.
The PowerPoint Morph transition tool is only available to those lucky enough to have PowerPoint 2016 (both Mac and PC), but if you’re one of the privileged few, you are in for a treat. So, what is Morph for PowerPoint? Morph can be used to fake really complicated animation effects within PowerPoint. Voiceover A very new featurein PowerPoint for Mac is a new slide transitioncalled 'Morph.' 'Morph' makes it easy to create seamless animationfor your slides by creating transitions.I have here one image.And all that image is is four shapes that I createdusing the basic shapes tool and thenI grouped them together to make one image.For example, from the 'Home. May 24, 2017 Solved Morph transition not available? I'm not really a Mac specialist BUT If you had a non subscription version previously it can be difficult to remove the license information in mac office and you will keep getting the old version back.
Dec 14, 2017 The Morph transition feature will work with PowerPoint 2016, but it should be under the Office 365 subscription. Based on the screenshot that you have provided, you have the Office Home & Business 2016 subscription. You may also check on this link to know more on which subscription the Morph feature is available.
No, this is not a blog about the little clay guy from the 70s. In fact, he’s no longer an animation at all, he’s now a transition.
The PowerPoint Morph transition tool is only available to those lucky enough to have PowerPoint 2016 (both Mac and PC), but if you’re one of the privileged few, you are in for a treat.
So, what is Morph for PowerPoint?
Morph can be used to fake really complicated animation effects within PowerPoint. It’s next-level animation, but technically it’s a transition. Morph can transition any object you can imagine – within PowerPoint, let’s not get carried away – across slides, seamlessly morphing into its next-slide counterpart.
Morph can create impactful animation effects without the time and effort of animation effects, and it can also be used to create cool parallax effects.
So what does all this Morph business look like for real? Here’s one we made earlier.
And here’s what it looks like in the edit window.
See, lots of separate slides, which transition together to create what looks like one animation. Super cool, I know.
I don’t want you to think you can’t use Morph just because this example looks a little complicated. By the end of this article, you’ll have all the tools you need to get started.
How to use the PowerPoint Morph transition
Morph recognises objects that are similar to one another across your chosen slides, and creates the simplest path.
While it tries to put two and two together visually, Morph also takes object names into account, and can easily end up coming out with five. This is why we’ve got a fool-proof way (I’m not calling you a fool, I was looking at the guy behind you) of using Morph so that it doesn’t get its little self all muddled.
The easiest way to make sure PowerPoint morphs into the object you want it to become is to copy the shape from one slide to the next slide, and then edit it into the new shape. That way the link is made, no confusion. Then, simply rinse and repeat until your slides are resembling a static flip book, or a movie storyboard.
Once you’ve created your slides, select all the slides in the series (except the first) and choose Transitions in your toolbar. Then, just click Morph to apply it to all.
Click into Slide Show mode and watch the magic unfold.
When put like this, it does sound really easy, but I don’t want to lead you astray. I respect you too much. Honestly, it takes a little practice, a little trial and error, but you’ll get there.
Once you’ve mastered the basics, the possibilities are numerous. You’re not limited to just moving from a circle to a square. Here are a few suggestions to play with:
Change the positioning using Morph in PowerPoint
Morph can move objects around the slide seamlessly, both vertically and horizontally. They can also morph on or off the slide, which creates really smooth fly in/fly out effects. As if that wasn’t enough, they can also rotate. Spin them right round baby, right round.
Two slides set up like this…
…can create this
Change the size using Morph in PowerPoint
Objects can be scaled and stretched, becoming both bigger and smaller. Morph is a great tool to use for this, because any animation you try to apply for the same effect will not be as smooth and clear as Morph.
![Morph transition powerpoint 2016 download Morph transition powerpoint 2016 download](https://www.free-power-point-templates.com/articles/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/PowerPoint-Morph-transition.png)
Change the colour using Morph in PowerPoint
You can move between different colours, gradients, and even filters using Morph. Escape from tarkov m4 modding. Creating the same effect with animations would be unbelievably time consuming. You’ve got better things to do, I’m sure.
Change the text using Morph in PowerPoint
Don’t forget about the other PowerPoint objects while you’re playing with your shapes. Morph can adjust text size between slides, or even the structure of entire paragraphs. Just make sure to not change any of the copy within the text box. That is asking way too much of the current version of Morph… maybe next year.
Setting your text up like this…
…leads to morph creating this:
A few final thoughts
Think of Morph as a mother of octuplets. She’s already taken on a lot, and she’s tired and she has food down her best skirt. We cannot blame her for, sometimes, getting her kids mixed up. They just look so damn similar.
Give her a helping hand by not offloading your own children on to her. In this metaphor, your children are additional entrance and exit animations. But they are the most beautiful entrance and exit animations. Simply stunning.
For example, on two slides that use a Morph transition, don’t add any exit animations to slide A. Similarly, don’t add any entrance animations to slide B. This is the quickest way to send her over the edge.
You also want to keep an eye on your layers. If an object on slide A sits on top of another object, but when it Morphs across to slide B, it is suddenly below it, Morph will jump it right back up again. Mostly, this tired mother just wants you to be methodical and consistent when building your slides. That’s all she asks.
Getting to grips with Morph can feel like an uphill struggle at first, but if you follow these rules and learn to understand how she sees the world, it will all morph nicely into place.
This is Part 2 of this tutorial (see Part 1 here). This is the same 4 slide deck with the exact same Morph transitions applied:
The critical difference is I went in and named each of the 6 shapes in the Selection Pane. This is the new Morph Object Tagging feature – it allows us to force associations of objects across slides, which forces Morph to transform exactly the objects we choose.
The behind the scenes coding (as I understand it) is a really clever hack by the Microsoft team. Each object (photo, shape, vector graphic, text box) is assigned a unique ID number, something we as a user cannot control, and is separate from the Selection Pane naming. Each slide, even with the same objects, is reassigned ID numbers, so there is not a guarantee of association from slide to slide. The Morph Object Tagging steps in as the slide transition starts, reading the Selection Pane names for each object. Then reads the Selection Pane names of objects on the next slide. If the objects start with a double exclamation mark “!!” and have the same name, Morph overrides the PowerPoint ID number and associated those two objects – a fantastic hack for everyone to take advantage of!
Slides 1-2; the logo and shapes go to the expected locations, with or without Morph Object Tags applied (see Part 1).
slides 2-3: All of the shapes rearranged themselves with Morph, again with or without Object Tags applied (which as a good surprise).
slides 3-4: without Object Tags, there was no motion and a legacy Fade Off/Fade On effect which really was not the desired motion. With Object Tags applied, the Morph transition works perfect!
Troy @ TLC