Every year, the same thing happens on July 7th. Instagram fills up with a thousand near-identical MS Dhoni birthday edits — same slow-motion helicopter shot, same “Captain Cool” text sliding in from the left, same generic bass drop. If you’ve scrolled through even ten of these reels back to back, you know exactly what I mean. They start to blur into one another.
So if you’re planning to make a Dhoni birthday edit this year and you actually want people to stop scrolling, the trick isn’t finding a “magic preset” that everyone else already has. It’s understanding why certain Alight Motion settings work for tribute edits, and then tweaking them enough that your version has its own identity. Let me walk you through how I’d approach it.
Why Alight Motion Works So Well for These Edits
Alight Motion has become the go-to app for cricket edits, mainly because it gives you layer-based control that CapCut and InShot simply don’t offer at the free tier. You can stack multiple video layers, mask them individually, and keyframe practically anything — opacity, scale, rotation, blur, even individual color channels. For a Dhoni edit, where you’re often blending archival match footage with newer clips, that layering flexibility matters a lot.
The other reason editors gravitate toward it is the .aemp preset file format. Once you build a look you like, you can save it, share it, or import someone else’s and apply it instantly. That’s exactly why “Dhoni preset packs” circulate so widely — but it’s also why so many edits end up looking the same. Importing a preset isn’t the finish line; it’s the starting point.
Building the Look: Color Grading
Start with color, because it does more heavy lifting than any transition ever will. Most Dhoni tribute edits lean into a warm, slightly desaturated tone — think dusty gold rather than punchy Instagram-filter orange. In Alight Motion, that usually means:
- Pulling saturation down slightly (not all the way — you still want jersey yellow and blue to read clearly)
- Adding a warm color overlay layer set to “Soft Light” or “Overlay” blend mode at low opacity
- A gentle vignette to draw the eye toward Dhoni rather than the crowd or stadium lights
- Slight highlights rolled back so the whites in old match footage don’t blow out
If you’re editing old 2011 World Cup clips alongside recent footage, matching the grain and grade across clips is what separates an amateur cut from one that feels intentional. Don’t skip this step just to get to the flashy part.
Motion and Transitions Without the Cliché
Here’s where most edits lose originality fast. The “zoom-on-beat” transition has been used so many times that it barely registers as effort anymore. A few alternatives that still land well in Alight Motion:
Speed ramping — keyframe the time-remapping so a clip slows down right as Dhoni makes contact with the ball, then snaps back to normal speed a beat later. This works especially well on the 2011 World Cup winning six.
Layered masking wipes — instead of a hard cut, mask one clip over another using a shape layer with feathered edges, then animate the mask position. It reads as smoother and more custom-built than a stock transition.
Light leak overlays — a subtle film-grain or light-leak layer set to “Screen” blend mode, timed to peak on transition points, adds texture without looking like a filter slapped on top.
The goal with all of these is subtlety. If the transition is the first thing someone comments on, it’s probably too aggressive.
Text and Typography
This is where a lot of tribute edits give away that they’re using an unmodified template. If your text animation is a generic bounce-in with a Google Font default, it won’t feel personal. A few small adjustments that go a long way:
- Use a condensed, bold serif or a hand-styled font rather than the default sans-serif that ships with most templates — it reads as more deliberate
- Animate text with a slight overshoot on scale (110% down to 100%) rather than a flat fade, which feels more alive
- Keep captions minimal — a date, a nickname, maybe one quote. Overloading the screen with text competes with the footage itself
Audio Sync Matters More Than People Think
A huge number of Dhoni edits use the same two or three trending audio tracks, which again pushes everything toward sameness. If you can, sync your cuts to the actual rhythm of the track rather than just dropping clips in roughly on the beat. In Alight Motion, add markers on the audio timeline first, then build your video layers around those markers. It’s a slower process, but the payoff — an edit that feels choreographed rather than assembled — is worth it.
Making a Preset Actually Yours
If you do start from a downloaded .aemp preset, don’t just import and export. Open every layer, check the blend modes, and change at least the color grade and one motion element. Even small changes — swapping a warm overlay for a cooler teal-and-orange split tone, or adjusting timing by a few frames — are usually enough to make the final result feel distinct rather than recycled.
Final Thoughts
The edits that actually go viral around Dhoni’s birthday aren’t the ones using the fanciest preset pack. They’re the ones where someone clearly spent time matching the color grade to the footage, chose music that isn’t oversaturated on the platform, and resisted the urge to cram in every trending effect at once. Alight Motion gives you the tools for that kind of control — it’s just a matter of using them deliberately instead of on autopilot.
Take the extra twenty minutes to color grade properly and tweak your transitions by hand. That’s usually the entire difference between an edit that gets scrolled past and one that gets saved.