Jump to content
IGNORED

Stop-motion software


gaarg

Recommended Posts

A while ago, I asked watmm about gif-creating software. I've grown a bit since then and now I need a program that would allow me to combine jpgs or gifs in a avi or mpg format. If the program would be able to combine sounds and music as well, would only be a bonus.

 

Anyone got any ideas, recomendations?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, Flash can accept GIF and JPG, but you'd have to lock the resolution of your output movie so the pixel-based elements don't get all blocky if the movie is scaled up or played fullscreen...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest assegai

Any video editing software would allow you to do that really. For animation many people use after effects, and adobe premiere is a pretty user-friendly video editing suite.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Any video editing software would allow you to do that really. For animation many people use after effects, and adobe premiere is a pretty user-friendly video editing suite.

 

Yeah, After Effects would work, but I don't know if it could do frame-by-frame tweening (it's been years since I messed with it) like Flash can, although if you're working with GIF/bitmap formats anyways, that wouldn't help you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest assegai

Any video editing software would allow you to do that really. For animation many people use after effects, and adobe premiere is a pretty user-friendly video editing suite.

 

Yeah, After Effects would work, but I don't know if it could do frame-by-frame tweening (it's been years since I messed with it) like Flash can, although if you're working with GIF/bitmap formats anyways, that wouldn't help you.

 

I thought we were talking about stop-motion, not flash-based vector graphics. After Effects could just about do anything you can imagine with animation, it's my primary go-to program. What exactly are you trying to accomplish? If you're talking about illustrator/vectors then Joyrex is right, go with Flash.

 

Edit: Music/SFX you're definitely going to want to do that in post. Adobe Premiere, Avid, Final Cut Pro, Quantel, Vegas etc..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thing is, I have 1100 frames here, and most of them will have custom time-stamps on, so I need a program, that will be fast and simple, concerning working with lots of pics. Flash I don't know, and defintely can't use too well I'm afraid. As for Windows movie maker: its been great, but please, no more. The quality of the output sucks.

 

I'm working my way through all the freeware now, damn, so much trash there...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest assegai

If you have a numbered sequence of images you can easily pop them in premeire as "import sequence" and it creates a nice clip for you to edit and you can toss your music/sfx in there. It's not free be any means though. Export it high quality with h.264 and you're good to go.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you have a numbered sequence of images you can easily pop them in premeire as "import sequence" and it creates a nice clip for you to edit and you can toss your music/sfx in there. It's not free be any means though. Export it high quality with h.264 and you're good to go.

or you import the sequence into after effects, same deal; if it doesn't import it as one composition with sequenced layers, you can select all the layers and choose "sequence layers" through animation presets or something like that. after effects (or to some degree) premiere are what you wanna work with. and you can tween in after effects, but flash is friendlier with traditional animation-style tweening (shape tweening and other nonsense). doesnt sound like you need that though

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok, Premiere I have, but: Is it really practical to work with 1100 frames in Premiere? The way I remember trying to work witg gifs and Premiere, nothing went as it should.

 

I'm gonna try Premiere though and also Stop-motion pro. But please, do keep the ideas flowing in, I desperately need them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest assegai

Ok, Premiere I have, but: Is it really practical to work with 1100 frames in Premiere?

 

Yeah, when you import the frames it creates one movie clip.

Which you can use the razor/scissor to cut up and edit.

1100 frames at 30fps is only about 18 seconds of animation correct?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest mrcopyandpaste

if you wanted to keep the images seperate in the timeline in premiere you could always go into your preferences and change the default still image length to a 30th of a second, or 25 in PAL. then provided your images are named sequentially, select them all and drop all of them into the timeline at once and they should order automatically.

 

also you wont be able to export gifs from premiere, but you can import your premiere sequence into After effects and use it as a composition, then you can render out from AE as a gif, if that makes sense

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The frame-rate I'm working with is around 7,8 frames per second. So, there's gonna be an awful lot of editing and time-stamping.

 

After efects I never used before, I guess now is a good time to change that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest JW Modestburns

After Effects is a good choice, I use it all the time... but if you have Quicktime Pro you may be set. Quicktime can import image sequences. You can also combine two movies or trim the video if needed. Not to mention, it exports high quality video and in my experience renders animation codec quicktime files faster than After Effects.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you're on a Mac, Final Cut Pro, or iMovie might fit the bill as well, although iMovie might be a bit light on the feature set for what you need...

 

Also, I forgot about this, but again, if you're on a Mac, Pencil might fit the bill.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"also you wont be able to export gifs from premiere, but you can import your premiere sequence into After effects and use it as a composition, then you can render out from AE as a gif, if that makes sense"

 

honestly, i can suggest after effects one more time, but that's the last time. you can control framerate, image duration thru timeline, simple shit broseph

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest David R James

I used to use flash but then moved to after effects , i couldnt believe how much better and flexible it was than flash.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

+1 for quicktime pro. It's really easy to use. You just need to open the first pic (i.e SDC10401), select the frame rate, then it will open the other pictures (SDC10402, SDC10403, etc...) and make a movie out of them. You might need a renamer like Ant Renamer(haven't tried it though).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.