 Hi guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosal here. I want to do a video today showing how to do in OBS Studio a image sequence of layover. So I'll show you exactly what I mean. Now firstly, I downloaded a bit of stock video footage of Pexels. As you can see, you got a bit of wheat here, barley, or some kind of a grain in a rotating circle. So what I'm going to do firstly is add this into my OBS as a media source. I'm just going to call this stock and I'm going to just have this guy looping. So that's my Pexels clip. Now, not enabled by default, so click on loop and speeds 100%. Do you know what I'm going to slow it down? Actually, I'm going to slow it down to 50%. This is actually quite useful, this little media source player. So we have our wheat spinning in slow-mo here. I'm going to do fit to screen. Okay, so that's just going to be there and let's just leave it run, see if hopefully it will loop itself over. And what I'm going to do at the end here is actually record this clip so you can see what I have achieved with this attempted OBS wizardry. Okay, good. It's looping. So now let me go ahead and create a couple of back layovers. I call these layovers lower thirds. If they're lower thirds, layouts, overlays, overlays, that's the word I was looking for. So I'm going to call this video overlay image sequences in OBS. So let me just do one that these are not going to be beautiful. Let's just say a bit of blackfill here, 74% transparency. This is overlay number one and I'm just going to put that in white, font and I'm just going to export this guy to the desktop. Now, I've gone for the same resolution intentionally as the canvas 1920, but one 920 by 1080 for 1080p HD. That's important obviously to get that right. So I'm going to call these lay, sorry, overlay underscore sequence and I'm just going to do these in numerical order. So I'm just going to call this one one. Now, let's say I wanted to say, let's pretend this is like a newscast or something like that. I mean this is intended for a stream. So I'm going to say do you have your own crazy story about Weast grains to tell? Call us 1800. You get the idea. So let's just say this. I'm going to put this here, take a little bit of space out here and a little bit smaller. Again, this is just really a quick and dirty demo. So I'm going to call this guy number two, two dot png and finally, whoops, just put that, reset that back to white here. All right, so that's going to be number three. So we're going to, we have now created three layouts on a background. So let's, you know, I'm going to pretend for a second. These were nicely designed and you put some effort into them. They're lower thirds or you could have, you know, your station logo or your stream logo, etc. So I've created three of these. Now, let's go back to OBS. So we have our rotating Weast. And now what I want to do is add an image slideshow and call these, I don't know what's wrong with my brain today. It's like having a hard time with this word overlays. Overlay loop. Okay. And what I'm going to do, so it's going to be looping and now we need to tell it where the image files are. So I'm going to actually add the directory instead of adding them. So remember, we put these all in the same directory and we called it overlay sequence. So I'm going to add that directory. So I've got number one and I'm going to have this on loop. I'm going to have the time between slides as four, no five, five thousand milliseconds, aka five seconds. I'm going to go for a snappier transitions and we're going to have a fade transition. So let's just look at how this will look now because I did this on a transparent background. You may notice there's nothing here and But now it'll become clear when I put it off. So that's how it is. So I've got this guy I wanted to show you what else you can do with the overlay loop. You could for instance change this to a slide transition that looks a little bit more dramatic and you'll see now in a few seconds. So that's I think that's going to look a bit bad. You can have a cush, which is just going to cut between one and two. And what you can do as well, let's go back to fade. What you can do is a randomized playback or you can, so let's say call it call the show. Typically you'd want this in some kind of a sequence. But you could also do the image files here and have them coming up in a random one. So let's just take that off. Let's go okay. And now let's record. So just imagine this is like a live stream. So you put in your overlay loop, you put in your webcam stream, and now they're on a transparent background and they're just going to be running and sliding one in the second. So that's enough. Let's just kind of stop this guy here, and now I'm just going to show you how this turned out. Okay, so here's the clip that we got out of this. Record is to the computer and the overlays are transitioning as a slide. So that's how if you want to use just for the purpose of creating overlays on your OBS stream or your recording, you can add them with the transparent background and actually use them in front of your video feed. Thank you guys for watching. More videos coming soon.