10. Drag the slider to frame 60, the last frame of your animation. (LightWave??™s default
length for new animations is 60 frames.)
This time, the camera stays where you put it. Auto Key automatically reset the
keyframe in frame 0 to capture your camera move.
11. With the timeline slider at frame 60, click and drag the blue handle for the camera
and move it to the back of Layout, as shown in Figure 6.4. Auto Key automatically
creates a new keyframe this time, capturing the new position information.
So now your animation has two keyframes: one at frame 0, indicating the camera??™s
starting position, and another at frame 60, reflecting its end position. Let??™s
see how the camera gets from the first keyframed position to the other.
Figure 6.4 With the timeline slider at frame 60, and the camera moved to a new position.
If you can??™t see the object to grab it, you can switch to the Back view by pressing the
number 1 on the keyboard. Mac users, remember to use the Apple key for right
mouse button commands.
Inside LightWave v9 224
Chapter 6 Principles in Motion 225
12. Drag the timeline slider back and forth and you??™ll see the camera move through
the scene.
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