

The “greyed out” areas won’t be visible during your slideshow. In this image, notice that the photo “spills over” the size of the slide. The second slide now fills the 16:9 slide background and has a subtle title on it. My second slide now looks something like this: Double-click the text to highlight it, then type your text over the placeholder. That brings the Title text to the top of the image. To edit the title of the slide, click the word “Title” under Appearance in the Slide Layout. If you normally take photos in a 16:9 aspect ratio, they’ll fit the slide format perfectly. Now my image is a 4:3 photo on a 16:9 slide, so I can drag the corners of the picture out to make the photo fit the slide. That’s really much more than I want, so under Slide Layout on the right side of the Keynote window, I click Change Master and switch to Photo – Horizontal. Moving on to the second slide, I notice that the default slide “master” is a text title with bulleted items beneath it. Our first slide is just a title slide, so I’ll add my name and the title “The Flowers of Spring”.
#RECORDING ICLOUD KEYNOTE PRESENTATION MOVIE#
Now you don’t have to be physically at a location to share a slideshow instead, you can just send someone the movie version of it and they can view at their leisure. What we’ll do is add text annotations on some slides, then add narration later. I give a lot of photo slideshows, and I know how boring it can be to talk to multiple audiences about each slide. The first slide, as seen in the screenshot above, is a placeholder title slide. We’ll take care of that in the next step. You’ll probably notice that if you chose a template with text on it, the text is behind your photos. Once the photos have been dragged and dropped to the sidebar on the left side of the Keynote window, they appear on separate slides. Drop the photos, and they are imported into Keynote with one photo per slide. Make sure that you can see both the contents of your slide folder and Keynote, then select the photos and drag them to the left sidebar where the app usually displays thumbnails of the slides. Your Keynote “deck” currently has just one slide - a title slide. Once the export was completed, I quit Photos so I could better focus on my Keynote slideshow. Once I picked the photos, I selected File > Export > Export Unmodified Original to move the images to my folder.

Going through the pictures, I just used a Command (⌘) – click to select multiple images. Since I like taking pictures of flowers, I decided to search for flowers, then find my best photos to export to the folder.
#RECORDING ICLOUD KEYNOTE PRESENTATION MAC#
As an example, I made a new folder on my Mac desktop named “Slideshow”. In the Finder, create a New Folder by either right-clicking and selecting New Folder, or by using File > New Folder in the menu bar. In order to get the best possible resolution for your photos, it’s a good idea to export them from the Photos app into a folder on your Mac. You can also select any one of the templates, but I found the Photo Essay template to be one of the best for slideshows.īefore we start playing with our images, let’s import them into Keynote. If you plan on using AirPlay to show your slides on a standard flat-screen TV, then the 16:9 aspect ratio is probably your best bet. Digital cameras have changed that, and our Keynote slide templates come in either 4:3 or 16:9 aspect ratios. Back in the days of photo film, just about every photo had either a 1:1 (square) or 4:3 aspect ratio. You’ll also have a choice of aspect ratio - the ratio of image width to height. On the Mac, launch Keynote and select a template from the choices available. Create A New Documentįirst, we need to create a new Keynote document. Let’s get started by creating a quick slideshow.
