Activity › Forums › Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy › Freeze Frame, Insert picture as background. Grindhouse style. How can i do this?
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Freeze Frame, Insert picture as background. Grindhouse style. How can i do this?
Posted by Sean Lee on January 1, 2012 at 10:53 pmHi, I was wondering how can i create the effect in this video at 0:18
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cKg6CVki5hkI’m using Final Cut Pro X and have figured out how to use create the freeze frame but have no idea how to insert an image around the person.
Is this possible to do in Final Cut Pro X or do i need other programs in order to create this effect? if so, which one(s) and can anyone tell me how to do this or can anyone direct me to somewhere that could tell me how to do this.Many Thanks in advance.
Steve Knattress replied 14 years, 4 months ago 5 Members · 5 Replies -
5 Replies
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Sean Lee
January 2, 2012 at 8:04 pmNo, I am doing a claymation short somewhat in the style of grindhouse. I will be shooting the claymation using iStopMotion and using Final Cut Pro to edit on.
I may also have access After Effects and Motion if that is needed to do the effect i would like to create.Do you know if the effect can be created using either of these programs? If not, How?
Thanks
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Chris Tompkins
January 2, 2012 at 9:57 pmTake your freeze frame out to Adobe PS
Cut it out.
Bring it back in.
Layer over background.
Or do it all in AE.Chris Tompkins
Video Atlanta LLC -
David Roth weiss
January 2, 2012 at 11:16 pm[sean lee] ” have no idea how to insert an image around the person.”
You don’t insert an image around the person, you essentially cut the person out of the existing frame, then put an image behind the person.
First, you create freeze frame of the person.
Then, you rotoscope around the person (best done with Motion, Combustion, AE, Photoshop, etc.) – i.e. draw a freeform matte around the person, thus turning everything outside the matte transparent.
Then you put the person on V2 above a background, which can be anything you want; video, text, animation, etc.
David Roth Weiss
Director/Editor/Colorist
David Weiss Productions, Inc.
Los Angeles
https://www.drwfilms.comDon’t miss my new Creative Cow Podcast: Bringing “The Whale” to the Big Screen:
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Creative COW contributing editor and a forum host of the Business & Marketing and Apple Final Cut Pro forums.
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Richard Van harderwijk
January 3, 2012 at 10:24 amIf you do stop motion, you can choose the background I assume.
Green, blue, even red if there are no human flesh tones in your clay.Then you don’t have to rotoscope, but use a chroma key. Be sure to use a cam/codec with good color space.
https://generalspecialist.com/2006/10/greenscreen-and-bluescreen-checklist.asp
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Steve Knattress
January 3, 2012 at 12:22 pmOften what works well if it is for a graphic with details of the person etc.
Is to select and possible zoom to your required frame in FCP ( zooming to leave room for graphics etc.)Then export that frame ( mark in and out on same frame then export as Tiff act, don’t used a compressed format such as jpg)
Bing into PS AE or anything you like then do as described above to get a cut out of your foreground figure.
It then put this on V2 above the original freeze background ( or any other you wish).
A slow move out of V2 above your background together with a slight move on the added graphics often works well.This is how the 3D effect on old photos is achieved.
You can separate the foreground people from the background in AE then put each person, any cut out objects etc on the background in a 3D space.Then move the camera for the required “3d effect”. ( clone/paint the background if you area moving too far and run out of background)Steve
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