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Activity Forums Adobe Photoshop Modifying A Final Cut Pro 6 Video Frame (Or Frames) In Photoshop CS3 ?

  • Modifying A Final Cut Pro 6 Video Frame (Or Frames) In Photoshop CS3 ?

    Posted by Ian Brown on November 21, 2008 at 4:29 pm

    My method of doing this is very clumsy and I am sure there must be some more elegant way.

    I export the frame as a still image and modify it in PS after which I import it back into FCP and put it on the track immediately above the original frame.

    This works but is rather fiddly.

    Is there a quicker and better way and whatever happened to that handy “Frame From Video” grabber that was part of PSE 2 ?

    What about FCP’s “Open in Editor” command ? I have got PS listed under “video” but can’t seem to open a selected frame in PS using this method.

    Tim Ryan replied 16 years, 11 months ago 5 Members · 10 Replies
  • 10 Replies
  • Alan Stephens

    November 24, 2008 at 6:55 pm

    If you want to modify the image then you are doing it the best way I know of.
    If you don’t need to modify, then make a freeze frame in FC. click on timeline, Modify/ Make Freeze Frame then drag it to the time line.

    Alan Stephens

  • Ian Brown

    November 24, 2008 at 7:17 pm

    Thanks Alan …… it looks as though I am searching for the impossible!

    It’s just that I always seem to use the slowest and most cumbersome techniques available.

    After four years with FCP I have only just stopped using the razor blade to slice up clips and started with In / Out points in the Viewer.

    Likewise today I have just started adding transitions and effects by dragging them from the Browser and dropping them on the timeline. Up to now I have ben going up to the menu etc. that takes ages.

    So that’s why I thought there must be a better way of using Photoshop!

  • Richard Harrington

    November 25, 2008 at 4:02 am

    If you own Extended.. you could just open the video and work on it that way in PS

    Richard M. Harrington, PMP

    Author: Photoshop for Video, Understanding Adobe Photoshop, and ATS:iWork

  • Ian Brown

    November 25, 2008 at 8:22 am

    That sounds promising Richard as I do have PS CS3 Extended …….. but how do I, “just open the video and work on it” ?

    I have been trying to do that for the past year! (I’m a slow learner).

  • Ian Brown

    November 25, 2008 at 9:18 am

    I think I’ve got it!

    File>Import>Video Frames to Layers

    Is that it?

  • Richard Harrington

    November 25, 2008 at 1:03 pm

    File > Open

    Then use the Animation timeien to step through

    Workflow is well documented in the manual

    Richard M. Harrington, PMP

    Author: Photoshop for Video, Understanding Adobe Photoshop, and ATS:iWork

  • April Tolliver

    March 3, 2009 at 5:42 am

    Hi-I’m trying to do exactly what was specified above (export a freeze frame to play with in photoshop) except I cannot seem to bring up my image in Photoshop. Its been a while since I’ve tried this, but I too made a freeze frame with a shot I’d like to make into a graphic and when I export it as a still image or even a jpeg it just saves an empty file with no image. The quicktime conversion in FCP does ask me what fps I want, which I find unusual when exporting a still image. I’m just not sure what I’m doing wrong. I use FCP quite regularly but am very rusty with my Photoshop skills. Can you help me?

    Thanks in advance

  • April Tolliver

    March 3, 2009 at 7:28 am

    OKay, I’m an idiot, I just figured out what my problem was. For some reason I felt the need to export it as a sequence rather than directly from the viewer hence the fps. I’m not sure where I got that from, maybe it had to do with my Avid/AE days. Maybe I did it wrong then, who knows…

  • Ian Brown

    March 3, 2009 at 8:18 am

    Select the frame you want in the timeline.

    Then File>Export>Using QuickTime Conversion.

    In the window that opens change “QuickTime Movie” to “Still Image” and in the “Options” tab select the format you want, as the default is “PNG”.

  • Tim Ryan

    June 13, 2009 at 11:19 pm

    I’m following those steps (file < export < QuickTime Conversion < Still Image) but my image is distorted. I'm attempting to export Freeze Frame images from a 960x720 HD timeline shot at 24p. I'm guessing the 960x720 has something to do with the distortion. So, do I drop the freeze frame images to a new SD timeline? Or, is there an adjustment I need to make once I open the images in Photoshop? Resizing is not an option in the QuickTime Conversion/Still image process. Txs. MacBook Pro Mac OSX version 10.4.11 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo 4 GB DDr SDRAM FCP 6.0 G-Raid 2 Tb external hard drive

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