Adobe Spark Video

Adobe Spark Video is a video storytelling application for the iPad and iPhone developed by Adobe Systems.[1] It combines motion graphics, audio recording, music, text, and photos and is used to produce short animated, narrated explainer videos.[2] It is part of the Adobe Spark suite of design and storytelling apps. It became the company's first application to be named by Apple as an App Store Best App of the Year[3] and has been downloaded over 3.5 million times.[4]

Adobe Spark Video
Developer(s) Adobe Systems
Initial release

May 8, 2014 (as Adobe Voice)

May 19, 2016 (as Adobe Spark Video)
Operating system iOS
Platform iPad, iPhone
Type Animation software
Website spark.adobe.com

Description

Unlike traditional video and animation software applications that rely on a timeline or keyframes, Adobe Spark Video presents a unique, simplified narration-based animation model: users read a line of their story to their device (pressing and holding an on-screen button as if using a walkie talkie), choose a visual (e.g., photo, icon, or text), and repeat these steps for each line ("page") of their story to create a complete animated, narrated video.[5]

Spark Video edits users' voices, adds backing music, and then automatically generates animated motion graphics synchronizing the narration and corresponding visuals, dynamically adjusting the length of animations to smoothly align with each line of the story.[6] It includes several dozen motion graphics themes that apply custom typography, color palettes, and digital effects and animation designed using Adobe After Effects, such as motion blur, drop shadows, zooming and panning, 3D, camera motion, textures, and animated masks.[7] The software claims to allow non-professionals to create animated narration-driven short videos “in minutes.”[8] Videos can be shared via a custom web page, email, SMS, Facebook, Twitter, or exported as H.264 video files. The application is popularly used by students and educators, small businesses, non-profits, and others intending to create short narrated videos to present ideas and stories online.

Designed by an educator, Spark Video includes several features intended to scaffold storytelling and media literacy concepts.[9] These include a built-in searchable library of Creative Commons licensed vector images and photographs, automatic tracking and generation of attributions, a library of music organized by emotional sentiment, and story guides with narrative story structure prompts (such as a simplified “Hero’s Journeystoryboard) to help users learn about narrative structure.[10] It attempts to encourage rapid revision and iteration though its touch-based recording model: to re-record a specific line in the middle of their story, users press and hold the record button to overwrite their old recording, and the application will automatically adjust audio and animation across the entire video to smoothly accommodate the new recording.

References

  1. "Adobe Voice 2.0 review: Presentation app for iPhone delivers sophisticated animated videos". Macworld. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  2. Tsukayama, Hayley (2014-05-22). "Adobe Voice app makes quick, slick animated videos with a professional look". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  3. "Adobe Voice – Show your story on the App Store". App Store. Apple, Inc. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  4. "Introducing Adobe Voice for iPhone – Creative Cloud blog by Adobe". Adobe Creative Cloud. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  5. "Adobe Voice: A Happy App for Making Explainer Videos". Yahoo! Tech. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  6. "Introducing Adobe Voice App – Adobe Voice & Slate Blog". blogs.adobe.com. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  7. Olivarez-Giles, Nathan. "Adobe Voice for iPad Could Help Turn Your Ideas Into Digital Stories". WSJ. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  8. "Adobe Voice review: Video storytelling software captures some of Apple's magic". Macworld. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  9. "Adobe Voice 2.0: Make stunning explainer videos – in minutes. Now on iPhone". Product Hunt. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  10. "Adobe Voice lets amateurs make videos like a pro (sort of)". Engadget. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
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