Take a look at the manual posted under the Lab Techniques tab that details how to prepare publication-quality videos using ImageJ. The manual includes sections on rotating and cropping image stacks, creating substacks to trim the number of frames that a video will show, combining multiple image stacks side-by-side so that they will play as one file, adding scale bars and time stamps to images, and annotating an image or video. A screenshot of the final video is shown to the right. Videos are courtesy of the Konstantopoulos Lab in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at Johns Hopkins University. Let me know if you have any comments or questions about other functions in ImageJ! |
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorColin Paul is a CRTA Fellow at the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health. Archives
August 2019
Categories |