Sunday, November 21, 2021
Production Blog Post 11/21/21
INV Blog Post 11/21/21
Monday - Worked on personal editing
Tuesday - Worked on personal editing
Wednesday - Worked on personal editing
Thursday - Worked on personal editing
Friday - Worked on personal editing
Smooth Slow Motion:
In some cinematics that use time remapping, a clean slow motion can give a professional feel to the clip/shot. However in order to have proper true slow motion you need the proper recording equipment. FPS (Frames Per Second) is dependent on how "choppy" your slow motion is going to look. If you have low FPS (ex. 24 fps), the slow-motion will be hard to use. But if you have high FPS (ex. 120 fps) the slow motion could be easily configured into a smooth slow transition. 60 FPS is most common used in recording of Phones, Cameras, Screen Recording, etc. which is usable but not ideal. The higher the frame rate the better quality you'll get out of this effect. A swift effect to add and to change, you can really see the difference. I would add this into my film if it had the proper FPS to make it not noticeable that it was effected .
Sunday, November 14, 2021
Inv Blog Post 11/14/21
Monday: Recorded clips (At home)
Tuesday: Recorded clips (At home)
Wednesday: Recorded clips (At home)
Thursday: Recorded clips (At home)
Friday: Recorded clips (At home)
Rendering Video to the Highest Quality:
This blog will be an important reminder to myself and many users on how to export to the best looking video quality that that can be produced in Premiere Pro. While not an exact technique every creator or artist should strive to their best ability to make their art work as clean, and top-notch looking as it can get from the public viewers. It was a fast and easy process to understand and to know for the future. The best part was is that you could actually save it as a rendering preset so you can automatically just keep applying the preset to save a couple minutes of changing everything to the way you want it. I could see the difference when the maximum bitrate is applied and even though its a larger file when exported it gives the video a crisper, better video quality than regularly exporting it from one of Adobe's presets. I would use this in every single one of my projects, even for personal use, however it is recommended to have an external hard drive to keep the files or use for extra storage in if you plan to be keeping the videos.\
The Tutorial:
Monday, November 8, 2021
Inv Blog Post 11/7/21
Speed Ramping:
Speed ramping is when you take a clip and slow it down or speed it up with a smooth transition of one another rather making it choppy and quick. It's mainly used in Time Remapping to give it a smooth effect once committed.
It was a slow process, you ad to time the ramp correctly to give it that nice "whoosh" transition. It's way more efficient and more easy to do it in After Effects however if you are limited to Premiere Pro it can still be done with a lot of patience. If you want the clip to be slower it gets longer, and if you want the clip faster it get shorter so you have to make sure there's no other clips around that could possibly be effected by it over lapping. It's a nice "effect" to put before or after a time-lapse or to give it a clean slow-motion effect which both could possibly be in a short film or video.
The Process:
1. Increase your video in "V1" so you can see the thin white line going through the video.
2. Right click the top left corner of the clip and select "time remapping."
3. Click on the line where you want the ramp to start. ( Hold control when clicking on the line)
4. Drag the line on the right hand side up or down to change the speed you want the speed to adjust to.
5. Take the right hand side of the arrow marker and slide it to the right creating the "slope."
6. Take the blue vertical lines and adjust it to the left and right to create the vertical slope.
Tuesday, November 2, 2021
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