Comments on TechSmith Camtasia: Exporting FramesTypePad2016-09-22T15:47:13ZIconLogichttps://blog.iconlogic.com/weblog/tag:typepad.com,2003:https://iconlogic.blogs.com/weblog/2016/09/techsmith-camtasia-exporting-frames/comments/atom.xml/Anne Goldenberger commented on 'TechSmith Camtasia: Exporting Frames'tag:typepad.com,2003:6a00d8341cdec153ef01bb0964749c970d2016-12-28T21:12:13Z2017-01-17T15:59:38ZAnne GoldenbergerJust a note to say that in Camtasia 9.0.1 for the PC, this option is in the Share menu (Share...<p>Just a note to say that in Camtasia 9.0.1 for the PC, this option is in the Share menu (Share > Export Frame As). </p>Kevin Siegel commented on 'TechSmith Camtasia: Exporting Frames'tag:typepad.com,2003:6a00d8341cdec153ef01b7c89600db970b2016-09-22T15:55:37Z2016-09-22T15:59:42ZKevin Siegelhttp://www.iconlogic.comUpdate: This article originally appeared in my skills & drills newsletter. Since then, I received a few emails (from Diane...<p>Update: This article originally appeared in my skills & drills newsletter. Since then, I received a few emails (from Diane Peters and Larry Alexander) with an alternative method: Extending a frame: rght-click on the video in the Camtasia Timeline and choose “Extend frame."</p>
<p>Both Diane and Charles are correct, extending is faster than exporting/importing. However, during the project in question importing the frame worked better than extending the playtime (extending was fouling up the audio).</p>
<p>Thanks Diane and Charles for sending in the Extend alternative.</p>