Drag it up
slightly from its current
position, about 600mm
or so, as shown in
Figure 6.3.
In the Layout window, you??™ll notice that there is always a key at frame 0 by default.Thus, an
object is locked in place even without Auto Key.Auto Key merely lets you make an adjustment
at frame 0 (or any other existing keyframe) without having to re-create the key.
The virtual cameras shown in Layout scenes are merely representational.Their focal
points are at their pivot points, where their positioning handles appear when they??™re
selected, not at their drawn ???lenses.???
Figure 6.3 Using the Move tool, drag the camera up a
bit on the Y-axis.
Note
8. Click and drag the timeline slider forward to another frame.
The camera seems to jump back to its original position.Move the slider back to
frame 0, and the camera is back in its original keyframed position.Unless you set a
keyframe (or reset an existing one) after you change an object??™s position, orientation,
or other attributes, the adjustments aren??™t captured and LightWave ???forgets??? them.
9. Click the Auto Key button to activate it (the button will turn white) and repeat
steps 6 and 7.
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