DV Info Net

DV Info Net (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/)
-   EOS Crop Sensor (APS-C) Sample Clips Gallery (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/eos-crop-sensor-aps-c-sample-clips-gallery/)
-   -   Big City, Low Light (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/eos-crop-sensor-aps-c-sample-clips-gallery/482163-big-city-low-light.html)

Doug Carlyn July 20th, 2010 11:59 AM

Big City, Low Light
 
My 2nd T2i video...


Tom Bostick July 20th, 2010 03:37 PM

nice
how did you do those transitions that start at 1:21?

Doug Carlyn July 21st, 2010 02:40 PM

Hi Tom,

I selected a few frames from clips that didn't make my final cut, exported the freeze frames from Final Cut Pro as stills. The next step was to import them into iPhoto to reduce the file size but keep image quality. Exported JPGs from iPhoto into a new folder and numbered them 001, 002 etc so that I had an Image Sequence. I then opened Apple Motion and it saw my new folder with the JPGs in it as an Image Sequence ready to be edited, so it's easy to make it a group. Once you open the sequence in Motion, you apply Optical Flow (instead of the default Frame Blending), you've got a morphing effect. I exported the group animation as a Quicktime movie and then re-imported that QT movie into my FCP timeline and there it is. After some experimenting I found that the morphing effect works better with a smaller file size, so that's why I did that middle iPhoto step. If you bring in an Image Sequence of 1080p stills into Motion it will crash (at least it did on my Powerbook Pro). Hope that all made some sense for you.

Tom Bostick July 21st, 2010 09:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Doug Carlyn (Post 1550870)
Hi Tom,

I selected a few frames from clips that didn't make my final cut, exported the freeze frames from Final Cut Pro as stills. The next step was to import them into iPhoto to reduce the file size but keep image quality. Exported JPGs from iPhoto into a new folder and numbered them 001, 002 etc so that I had an Image Sequence. I then opened Apple Motion and it saw my new folder with the JPGs in it as an Image Sequence ready to be edited, so it's easy to make it a group. Once you open the sequence in Motion, you apply Optical Flow (instead of the default Frame Blending), you've got a morphing effect. I exported the group animation as a Quicktime movie and then re-imported that QT movie into my FCP timeline and there it is. After some experimenting I found that the morphing effect works better with a smaller file size, so that's why I did that middle iPhoto step. If you bring in an Image Sequence of 1080p stills into Motion it will crash (at least it did on my Powerbook Pro). Hope that all made some sense for you.

very cool thank you!


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:11 PM.

DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2024 The Digital Video Information Network