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Activity Forums Adobe After Effects Slow Motion Plug In

  • Danny Princz

    March 30, 2007 at 3:47 am

    if you have AE7, then it comes with one (might be pro version only)

    if not there is realviz retimer, re:vision twixtor.

    the foundry has kronos in its furnace for AE package which i think is what adobe incorporated in to ae7

    who is that masked man…

  • Brian Kayfitz

    March 30, 2007 at 5:36 am

    If you don’t already have Timewarp (It comes with AE7pro) then you can play with Time Remapping + Frame Blending

    Brian Kayfitz

    High Definition Authoring
    http://www.infinitehd.com

  • Majorasshole

    March 30, 2007 at 6:51 am

    You can also shoot 60p and then play that in a 24p or 30i or 30p timeline. That is the proper way. DVX100, HVX200 or Varicam.

  • Chris Zwar

    March 30, 2007 at 9:18 am

    Yes, AE 7 incorporates Kronos from The Foundry.

    -Chris

  • Shin Kurokawa

    April 1, 2007 at 1:33 am

    I’d suggest that you check out all the different
    options that are out there, as each one is better
    at certtain things than another solution.

    If you want a very, very tweakable solution,
    RE:VisionFX Twixtor Pro is up there —
    here, not only can the user override the motion
    estimation, a separate footage can be fed
    (ex. contrast-exaggerated) , in case
    of bad tracking. YMMV. Again, another solution
    might be better at certain types of footage.

    As with any effects of this type, the more
    temporal (and spatial) samples and less inter-frame
    differences the better the end result. Also, optic-flow
    algorithms are extremely sensitive to brightness
    changes over time, so it’s recommended
    to de-flicker as much as possible prior to using
    these.

    Of course, if the more-traditional ‘dissolve-y’,
    blurry type of slo-mo is what you’re after (…as opposed
    to ‘new’ inbetween frames being created from warping/
    morphing frames etc), there’s no need for optic-flow-based
    solutions.

    -Shin

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