Never thought of animating the outline before, that is cool. Also, is your video contained with some padding so that all the desktop sliding doesn't make people dizzy?
here's a tweet with the outline tip! twitter.com/argyleink/status/1387072095159406596?s=20 the padding is a "safe zone" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safe_area_(television)
It's a CSS4 spec feature (not released yet) he is using s pre-processor to make it work in browsers for now. Here is a link to the draft -> drafts.csswg.org/css-nesting/
@@jonathan-._.- oh! i understand now thanks! that would solve the problem of truncation yep, but may come at the cost of a bouncy reading experience? I suppose there would need to be a minimum font size set too, so things dont shrink to an unreadable size? but, "maybe"s aside, I'm sure there's an elegant way to have some fluidly sized typography work out. maybe a slab text effect could work, and there's a max number of lines and titles get slab fit in? fun thoughts! thanks for sharing!
@@AdamArgyleInk Relative text size has actually been something I've been longing for in pure css for such a long time, but it seems because of rendering it just isn't viable. At least that's what I gathered from the discussion I read years ago about it, maybe it is now....
i try to leave them native so users dont have to learn anything new. it's just part of user's bringing their own preferences and widgets to the page. but, if i was a brand and wanted to differentiate, i'd consider styling them or customizing them to fit the brand.
i get an audio clip from the editing team and lipsync it with adobe character animator, then animate the rest of the face, then send the result back to editing!