hey folks
finally worked it out ... i'm using avid MC3
i had to:
open a new project in avid choose 'film 16mm' format
import the master clip split it into 8 subclips, each of which corresponded
to a roll of neg (the master clip = a telecine of 8 rolls of 16mm neg)
check the key numbers on the
Yes, the transfer to video has to has K#s encoded to be able to create a
cut list
On Fri, Oct 25, 2013 at 1:44 PM, chris bravo iamdir...@gmail.com wrote:
not experienced with doing this, but I wonder if you put the correct
timecode on the master clip with cinema tools (or something), then
Which AVID are you using? Are key numbers the same as Ink Numbers?
On Sat, Oct 26, 2013 at 9:50 AM, Francisco Torres fjtorre...@gmail.comwrote:
Yes, the transfer to video has to has K#s encoded to be able to create a
cut list
On Fri, Oct 25, 2013 at 1:44 PM, chris bravo
Hi,
This was awhile ago, but I used a flex file that came with the transfer of
my material, which had a keycode burn in. I believe this was Media Composer
5 in about 2010.
Not to ask the obvious, but do your dailies actually include keycode
running along with the video? Feel free to message me
not experienced with doing this, but I wonder if you put the correct
timecode on the master clip with cinema tools (or something), then relinked
the master file in avid to the new clip, it would automatically load the
new timecode info. what makes me think this is not going to work is that
there
hey folks
i'm trying to figure out how to matchback some 16mm neg to an avid edit
I shot 8x100' rolls of 16mm and got video dailies back in one file
I imported that file into avid it into 8 subclips (one for each 16mm 100'
roll) ... what i'm trying to figure out now is how to add the key
There used to be a version of the Avid Software called Film composer, it
had the capacity to handle K#s. All other Media composers COULD not do
that. Since then it seems other versions could handle film cut lists
through film scribe-
This may help-