
In this installment of Izzy Video, I demonstrate how to do single frame animation. It’s easy to do, and if you have children (like I do), you might want to get them involved. They’ll love it too.
The editor I use is Final Cut Pro, but you could just as easily use iMovie or any other video editor that allows you to import digital photos.
As always, thanks for watching!
Update –
Within a couple hours of when I posted today’s installment of Izzy Video, I received this great email from Dave Morrison. Dave, thanks for the helpful tip!
Hi Izzy,
I’ve really enjoyed your video tutorials over the last few months. I REALLY
enjoyed tonight’s offering about single-frame animation because I can
finally contribute back to you! There’s a MUCH easier way to do this
operation and you already have the necessary software.
Here’s all you do:
1. shoot all your still-frame images in just the manner you described
2. put them all in one folder
3. open Quicktime Player Pro.
4. go to the pulldown for Open > Image sequence
5. point it to the folder where the images are contained
6. pick whatever frame rate you desire
7. sit back and enjoy your movie
I’ve used this for a multitude of timelapse projects and it works great. If
you’re into a more “long form” video, here’s a site where they describe a
fairly inexpensive intervalometer that you can get to capture images at any
rate you want:
http://www.digitalsecrets.net/secrets/Accessory.html
have fun,
dave morrison
st. pete, fl
Additional update:
Another time-saving strategy, this time from Ryan, who writes:
Izzy,
Good podcast, just a few shortcuts for if you are doing stop-motion (single frame) animation in FCP:
1) You can change the default still/freze frame duration in the USER PREFERENCES to be 1 or 2 frames (or any duration) so that when you add the images to your project, FCP automatically assigns them all the same 1-frame duration. (note: you must change this setting BEFORE importing the imgages into FCP)
2) Since digital photo cameras number the photos filenames sequentially, you can just select all the photos from the browser and drag them into the timeline. It will order the photos numerically according to the filename, so it will add them all in the timeline at once, and in the correct order.
Thanks for the great Podcasts!! Keep up the great work!!
-Ryan
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All past Izzy Video tutorials are located in the membership area.
You can also watch free samples here.