Pixlo adds push, zoom, rise, and drop transitions for recap exports
Pixlo added new transition presets including push, zoom, dissolve, rise, and drop for still-image recap videos. Use it if you want to keep the workflow at image upload plus export instead of moving into a separate editor.

TL;DR
- Pixlo added a new transition pack for still-image recap videos, and the launch demo shows push, zoom, disolve, rise, and drop presets in motion.
- The core workflow stays minimal: according to a reply about how it works, you drop images into the app and export a recap video in seconds.
- A follow-up reply on timing says the update is still in final testing and should ship this week.
- Outside the tweets, the Pixlo homepage shows slide, background, blur, overlay, and image-fit controls, while an April walkthrough says exports are free, watermark-free, and available in 1080p or 2160p.
You can open Pixlo right now, watch the transition demo, and check an earlier walkthrough that reported offline use after the app loads in the browser. The interesting bit is how little editing ceremony Pixlo is aiming for: the tweets keep the pitch at image drop plus export, not timeline work.
Transition presets
The new pack is a small feature, but it changes the feel of Pixlo's recap exports more than a new filter would. The launch post frames the update around motion presets, not editing controls.
- Push
- Zoom
- Disolve
- Rise
- Drop
Upload and export
The workflow stays deliberately thin. According to the workflow reply, users drop images into the app and export a recap video in seconds, while the rollout reply says the transition update is in final testing and due this week.
That keeps Pixlo in a different lane from full editors. The homepage still centers slide-by-slide styling controls rather than a timeline or multilayer composition view.
Browser-side extras
Pixlo already had more export polish than the tweets spell out. The April walkthrough says the app is free, requires no signup, exports without a watermark, and offers 1080p and 2160p output.
On the interface itself, the Pixlo site exposes padding, rounded corners, shadow, blurred-image backgrounds, overlay controls, and cover or contain image-fit options. The same walkthrough reports the app can keep working offline after load, suggesting browser-side rendering instead of a server upload step.