Creating Seamless Video Loops for Backgrounds and Presentations
Looping video backgrounds add motion to websites and presentations. Creating seamless loops requires careful planning of start and end frames to avoid visible jumps.
Key Takeaways
- A seamless loop has identical first and last frames, with smooth motion throughout.
- The simplest method: duplicate the clip, reverse the second half, and cross-fade at the midpoint.
- <video autoplay muted loop playsinline>
- Background loops should be 5-15 seconds long.
分辨率参考
常见屏幕分辨率参考
What Makes a Good Loop
A seamless loop has identical first and last frames, with smooth motion throughout. The viewer should not be able to detect where the loop restarts.
Techniques
Cross-Dissolve
The simplest method: duplicate the clip, reverse the second half, and cross-fade at the midpoint. This creates a palindrome loop that plays forward then backward.
Pros: Works with any footage. Cons: Unnatural motion reversal is visible with people or text.
Match Cut
Find a natural loop point where the last frame closely matches the first. Works best with repetitive motion — waves, spinning objects, flickering flames, or particles.
Freeze Frame Blend
Freeze the last few frames and blend them into the first few frames using opacity transitions. Subtle but effective for slow-moving footage like clouds or water.
Web Implementation
Key attributes:
autoplay+muted: Required for autoplay in modern browsersplaysinline: Prevents fullscreen on iOSloop: Restarts automatically
File Size Tips
Background loops should be 5-15 seconds long. Longer loops increase file size without adding perceived variety. Compress aggressively — background videos are decorative and tolerate lower quality.