Hi,
John Culleton [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Tuesday 09 September 2003 14:28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can anyone tell me an easy way to edit a movie frame by frame in
gimp? This would be useful in rotoscoping (like in the creation of
light saber effects). I don't have ready access
Sven Neumann wrote:
Hi,
John Culleton [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Tuesday 09 September 2003 14:28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can anyone tell me an easy way to edit a movie frame by frame in
gimp? This would be useful in rotoscoping (like in the creation of
light saber effects). I
Title: Rotoscoping
Can anyone tell me an easy way to edit a movie frame by frame in gimp? This would be useful in rotoscoping (like in the creation of light saber effects). I don't have ready access to the internet, so a e-mail answer would be nice.
Timothy Baldridge
You might be interested in CinePaint (before known as FilmGimp). It's a
branch-off of Gimp which is geared towards film. One of the main
differentiators with Gimp is that it has the feature you are looking for.
http://cinepaint.sourceforge.net/
Cheers,
Daniel.
On Tue, Sep 09, 2003 at
Hi,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Can anyone tell me an easy way to edit a movie frame by frame
in gimp? This would be useful in rotoscoping (like in the creation
of light saber effects). I don't have ready access to the internet,
so a e-mail answer would be nice.
The GAP plug-in offers a
On Tuesday 09 September 2003 14:28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can anyone tell me an easy way to edit a movie frame by frame in
gimp? This would be useful in rotoscoping (like in the creation of
light saber effects). I don't have ready access to the internet, so a
e-mail answer would be
This one time, at band camp, Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Can anyone tell me an easy way to edit a movie frame by frame
in gimp? This would be useful in rotoscoping (like in the creation
of light saber effects). I don't have ready access to