Once you're finished editing your title, close the title editing menu by clicking elsewhere in the editor. This feature usually cannot be edited, so if you want to remove it we suggest choosing a different title. NOTE: some titles blur or darken the video in the background. STARS: you can adjust the number of stars displayed in the title's star rating. TIMING: you can adjust timings of motions in the title. LOGO: you can add a logo and adjust the size (this is a premium branding feature only available on certain paid plans or for one-off payments). Some title styles will offer additional menus at the top of the screen, such as: If necessary, adjust the settings in other menus The targets so if we could find if the company name and face.If the title style you chose has elements in different colours, you might see additional color options that you can edit separately, such as:ĩ. If in the civil fine to replace dead to find a particular word tragic to another live within 11 twisted left with kind Q of the 82nd would be Going to search for XYZ.Īnd here’s the SAME audio converted from speech to text within Camtasia: We do need extra functions, so we need the one that’s under control H, so I press control H, just move it up a little out of the way here. Italics first thing we’ll do is we open the find replace window.
So what we’re going to find is the company name in this case here XYZ, and we’re going to replace it with another name and make that name. In this simple find and replace, we’re going to find a particular word, change it to another word, but we’re going to add a twist to that, and we’re going to make the second word in italics.
And when I imported the transcription as an SRT file (using the same time stamps as the Camtasia SRT file), it left out all by about 5 seconds of audio, so that wasn’t a good option. The Word one needed a little editing the Camtasia one needed to be rewritten from scratch. Here’s what the transcription function in online Word had, followed by what Camtasia thought I’d said. I exported the narration to an MP3 file, then used the online version of Word to transcribe it to text and it was perfect, whereas the Camtasia version was unintelligible.)įurther to the audio issue: Yes, my headset microphone made the world of difference to the audio, but despite that, the speech to text conversion in Camtasia for the captioning was still awful. These last two are exactly the same, except one’s at 64 pts and one’s at 96. Speech Bubbles Thought bubbles Text Arrows Rectangles If you don’t want any shapes, and just want to add text, you’re going to be looking using their plain text options over here.
The words in the captions that Camtasia created bore NO resemblance to anything I’d said!! I’ll try again tomorrow with a different microphone Meantime, I wondered if it was Windows speech recognition that was at fault or Camtasia, and in my minimal testing I can say that it was Camtasia. By default Camtasia gives you 4 basic shapes to use in order to add your text. (Aside: Despite training my voice for speech recognition as Camtasia suggests, my experiments using their Speech to Text function were abysmal. So I shut down Camtasia and restarted it and the Speech to Text option was now available. I downloaded and installed both, then check the Speech to Text settings in Camtasia. My Windows language settings were set to both English Australian and English US, but when I looked a bit further (click on the language name and select Options), I didn’t have the language pack for Australian English installed and the speech ‘pack’ for US English wasn’t installed either. Something someone said on a forum about Windows language settings led me to find the solution however, I tried several things, so I’m not sure exactly which one was the critical one. But there was a problem - the Speech to Text option was grayed out and unavailable. I used to use it for creating training videos years ago, but haven’t used it in a long while, so the new version is a just a little bit different… Anyhow, one of the features of Camtasia 2021 is that you can convert your audio narration to caption text, using their Speech to Text function (open the Captions option and click the cog wheel settings icon for it).