For everyone else, please do try and pay a higher amount. We therefore set a minimum price to make this download affordable for them. We use this system of you choosing any price over and above a set minimum because some users such as students may not be able to pay a higher price. The + in the cost indicates that while there is a minimum price set for this download, you can pay more if you wish. 10 sample presentations with ready-to-use countdown slides (just copy the first slide to your presentation).īuy and Download for $9.99+ (58.2 mb) Why is there a + in the cost?.All presentations are also available as exported video clips (MP4 files).Available in two time spans: 10 minutes and 15 minutes.Available in two slide sizes for both standard (4:3) and widescreen (16:9) resolutions.Just copy and paste the slides in your presentation, and the slide objects will inherit the color schemes of the presentation you paste into! Each slide has animated objects that already contrast with the slide background.5 different styles of Countdown Timers (see the Show Me The Timers section on the right or scroll down and watch the YouTube playlist of all the timers).Plus, we also include video clips in this series, if you want these countdown timers as video clips rather than slides. After the success of our first Countdown Timer series, here's another set that contains longer countdowns (10 and 15 minutes each). Hope this makes sense, do let me know if you need me to go over in more detail.We are happy to announce a second bunch of Countdown Timer slides. Lastly, the motion path on the thumb will need to be reduced slightly, as it’ll be pressing down a little too far. You’ll need to re-insert the audio clip as otherwise the animation won’t run past the first second. You’ll see that all of the elements have pasted in smaller than in the original. Once slide is made smaller, open up the presentation you were wanting the countdown timer to appear smaller in, select all of the elements on the countdown timer slide, copy them and paste them into the other presentation. To do this click on the design tab, then page setup, make sure when you custom adjust the screen, the width and height are in the same ration as before (otherwise the objects will stretch/compress). You need to adjust the slide size of the countdown timer presentation. There is a work around, but it’s a little tricky. I’m afraid that as you’ve noticed, grouping the objects will lose the animations. Really glad you like the countdown timer, it was fun to create in some spare time one afternoon. Let us know if you have any other ideas you’d like to see us create similar effects with! If you still want your countdown timer fix, have a look at this tutorial to make a countdown timer with a scrolling background. Click the link to download the PowerPoint file:ġ minute countdown timer – hand and stopwatch To see how just how far you can take this effect in PowerPoint, we have developed a more advanced 1 minute countdown timer – hand and stopwatch, this includes numbers and a ticking second hand counting down from 60 seconds. We’ve created a short video showing how to carry out the exercise below: You can now think of ways to bring the timer to life, using PowerPoint objects to make it look more like a clock, or whatever device you think would work well. You now have (a very basic) 1 minute countdown timer. Then to the right, change the duration of the animation to last 60 seconds (rather than the default 2). Once you’ve selected the animation, along the top ribbon you can click on Effect options, changing the rotation to clockwise. So now you need to select the grouped lines, and animate them with the spin option. Place this line at the end of the first line, group the two of them together and then make one of them 100% transparent. In order avoid this issue regarding the centre point of rotation you will need to create another line, the same length of the initial line. This is where our PowerPoint trick comes into play. The first issue is that you can’t simply rotate the second hand as a single object, the animation assumes that the centre point of rotation is at the mid-point of the line. So the simplest way of creating your own countdown timer is by creating a second hand and then rotating it using the ‘spin’ animation. Okay so maybe a countdown timer isn’t the most exciting thing to make, however in the creation of a timer we can demonstrate a really neat trick you can apply to help make objects move and animate in more interesting ways, with the use of transparency. Here at BrightCarbon we couldn’t hold out any longer and we’ve decided to share the secret! Read on and become part of a very exclusive group… I know you’ve all been thinking it – how on earth do I create a countdown timer in PowerPoint? It’s one of life’s great mysteries, baffling great minds for generations.
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