Bob Auiler
Forum Replies Created
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CHV has a filter called “ON DRUGS”, in their time collection plugins that might give you the look you want. I of course cannot verify if the effect is accurate.
https://www.chv-plugins.com/colltime.html
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iPhoto is great for doing just what you want. Import the soundtrack and pick the photos. iPhoto will then adjust the duration of each photo to fit the soundtrack, plus it will even put editable moves and a transition on each photo. That’s about as monkeylike as I can make it.
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You can generate your text with any title tool and get beautiful rolls as long as you move it on the y-axis at multiples of 4 pixels per frame, which is the same as 120 pixels/second. The next speed after 120 is 240, which starts to get pretty fast.
Because the flicker problem is NTSC related and not a Smoke, FCP, Avid, AE etc. problem, rolling text at any other speed, flicker filter or not will give poor results, when viewed on a NTSC monitor.
Bob Auiler | bob.auiler@mvpcollaborative.com
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If you are working in NTSC, make your roll speed a multiple of
120 lines/second and they will be smooth.Bob Auiler | bob.auiler@mvpcollaborative.com
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Works great here, no conflicts so far with CineWave or ATTO.
Bob Auiler | bob.auiler@mvpcollaborative.com
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You can also try applying the color corrector. At the bottom left of the color corrector control panel is a limit effect triangle that will open up the limit effect controls. select the eyedropper and click on the window, then turn the whites and mids down. You’ll then be able to see what you’ve selected, if the whole window doesn’t darken, hold down your shift key and select other bright spots. You can fine tune your selection by adjusting edge the thin and softening controls, also play with the color controls to get the evening light the way you want it.
Bob Auiler | bob.auiler@mvpcollaborative.com
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It’s possible that it’s your video card, if you want to e-mail me a sample of your video roll, I’ll try it here.
Bob Auiler | bob.auiler@mvpcollaborative.com
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Bob Auiler
March 6, 2006 at 12:20 am in reply to: Exporting multiple frames as JPEG quickly from FCPThe quickest way I know of is to park your playhead on a shot, then do a match frame (f) then (shift-n),
that will put a freeze frame in your Viewer. You can then drag that freeze from the viewer window to a bin
and give it a name.After you have a bin full of stills, control click it and select batch export. An export queue window with
all of your stills will open up, go to settings at the bottom of the export queue window
and select Format> Still Image, then Options>JPEG. Click export and your on your way.Bob Auiler | bob.auiler@mvpcollaborative.com