Thanks Matthias, I understand more from your questions. I dont need it all really except it has been recommended that I work this way.
However, I think I might need it for very long takes if I see that one or two frames are faulty for example. In that case I would like to be able to repair just those frames without re-rendering the whole take. But since I shoot in short takes there doesnt seem to be much need to even have that ability. I have seen only one small set of problem frames in the 7 short films I've done so far. And it would be only a few hours to correct that. Maybe double that if it affected both eye views of a stereo project ... but easy enough. I dont have an expert Comping App - I use Magix. So far as I can see it can only load vids or ... stills as stills (not animation streams). I restrict effects to what RS can do and while there is a Blue Screen ability in the app, I have not needed to use it at all so far. Maybe I just forget the idea and keep with what I'm doing. Neil Cooke ________________________________ From: Matthias Kappenberg <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Sat, 5 June, 2010 8:11:30 PM Subject: Re: Render x Frames Tutorial Hi Neil, if you need it for a basic compositing task: TGA + Alpha Playback via "VirtialDub" ( http://www.virtualdub.org/ ) If you need it for AfterEffects or Fusion try layered PSD-Format if you need specific channels. It would be helpy if you can tell the name of the Comp-App. Matthias ----- Original Message ----- >From: Neil Cooke >To: UserList RealSoft >Sent: Saturday, June 05, 2010 9:51 > AM >Subject: Render x Frames Tutorial > > >Hi List, > > >The need is to shift to rendering frame by frame. I have no idea how to > do this and cant find anything in the manual. > > >I can render an animation to BMPs or JPGs or whatever no problem but have > yet to get them into the Comping App or even play them back as a Vid .... > working on it though. > > >Also the file sizes go ballistic with what I'm looking at so far so I > might be out of luck with limits in the machines for that reason. > > >Currently rendering to AVIs with Cinepack compression. 1920 x 1080. And > this system is working well so far. > > >Any help appreciated. > > >Neil Cooke
