True use of TIMECODE is what I really need to understand. I just need to get actual hours on the cameras not just the freakin forums and reviews.Īt the internship place they're using Avid 3.5's, most of the footage is XDCam, they digitize to SD however they're media storage ins't able to handle HD (EXCE producer said it cost some $90,000 to upgrade), but if they upgrade, the just have to relink the media and batch capture the XDCam media because they've kept archives and timecode. I'm also extremely self driven and extremely picky about doing things right IN THE FIELD rather than in post LOL I'm also very camera knowledge when it comes to formats as well. well I'll keep that to myself, too many tools in the way, the bells and whistles, but nothing beats the speed of color correction in Avid, unmatched for everyday stuff. I’ve only cut on Avid, I use Vegas 9 (due to native AVCHD on my little laptop) for fast turn-around edits like this: and I’m about to start my first music video with him as well haha.įCP. I'm currently tapping into much more intensive media management. I was introduced to Avid 2.8.4 back in 2007 in Fairfax HighSchool with Dave Ruby, I built up my own system in early 2008, then got Avid 5.0, Avid still continues to surprise me. I guess you could look at this reel here, all my work except for the stuff at the end, read the text in between for details: password is: stu ![]() I'm about to start Interning with Fox's America's Most Wanted. I'm a student at the moment (AiW they don't even teach Avid, it's kind of a joke place.). ![]() Like slowing down 24p footage by 50%, you can choose to either have blended frames in between or non which will result in a 12 fps slow stuttery look. The blended interpolated and stuff is if you don't really care for frame blending. With this, your 60p footage (given you fast imported it in a 60p project first) will play back smoothly without frame blending but with crisp progressive images. If you have 60p footage that you've brought into a bin on a 24p timeline, drop it on the timeline, place curser over the clip, select the motion effect editor, click 'promote' at the top, click the running man, change speed to 100% (avid will see 60p as 250% in a 24p timeline), type to both fields, source as progressive, output as progressive. If you have, for example, footage in 30p, and you want to slow it down without frame blending, you slow it down 50% and choose fluidmotion, it'll morph it and look like it was shot in 60fps. I did this when I had a 1080i handycam, made my stuff look like it was shot on a reasonable 24p camera.įluid motion is also if you want to slow down footage past it's framerate. At this point, anything in fluidmotion you have to render. ![]() You apply the timewarp effect, don't adjust the speed, select type to Fluidmotion, sours is interlaced, output is film with 2-3 pulldown. It morphs the 60i frames into 24p frames. (this feature only works with interlaced media) If you were given 1080 60i (applies to any frame size) footage, you can turn it into a 'film' look which is 24p. For slowing down footage slower than the provided framerates, you DON'T have to use fluidmotion (everything else is in realtime, fluidmotion is the one you have to render), this actually morphes frames that don't exsist by using previous and next frames to thus create a new frame.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |