Comments

BillyBoy wrote on 11/16/2002, 5:16 PM
No way I've found, probably because it defeats the purpose. The idea is to take a "snapshot" of a single FRAME, not a whole series of frames, that would be a movie. <wink>
craigunderhill wrote on 11/16/2002, 5:19 PM
that's short-sighted on sf part. i can think of plenty of reasons to export a series of images.

ok...satish...can you come up with a simple plug-in that will do this?

-craig
Sr_C wrote on 11/16/2002, 5:36 PM
Premiere has this ability in that you can save to a filmstrip (.flm) file, which you can open in Photoshop. This is especially nice in the way of frame by frame editing (rotoscoping) The problem for me is..I would really use this feature but I hate, yes hate Premiere and refuse to become a user.

Even more apealing to me would be if Vegas had some sort of basic paint utility built into it. Something where you utilise even basic paint tools on a frame by frame basis, all in Vegas.
Tyler.Durden wrote on 11/16/2002, 5:40 PM
Hi All,

I have heard that Scenalyzer will convert an avi into a still-sequence, but the images may be BMPs...

I did write a RemoteKeyes macro to do this in Vegas, but it is quite the klooge, so you might try SClive first to see if it is useful.


HTH, MPH

Tips:
http://www.martyhedler.com/homepage/Vegas_Tutorials.html
craigunderhill wrote on 11/16/2002, 6:56 PM
OK..here's my point.

1. it should be just as easy to choose "export to image files" as to make an .avi

2. there are many reasons to want this feature.

a.) just like in 3d rendering, if you computer crashes, you don't have to re-
render the whole thing again. you just pick-up where you left off.

b.) i want to pull some frames of a character, then go into photoshop and "punch"
the character out of the scene. have you seen all the cool cartoon network
stuff? i'm betting they used a similar technique.

c.) what if you are doing something specialized, and you NEED to import an image
sequence (for whatever reason).


this is all to simple for me. i can't believe it's not in the program.

-craig
salad wrote on 11/16/2002, 6:58 PM
I like to use Virtual Dub for this. It's very fast & it deinterlaces as well. Each .BMP ends up being about 1MB.
I think we are going to see this in VV4 :-o
BillyBoy wrote on 11/16/2002, 9:56 PM
I think some misunderstood what I said. Sure it would be nice to be able to grab a series of frames but the little floppy icon over the preview window has only one purpose... to snap a single frame (snapshot) of whatever is in the preview window so you get a single still.

For now, if you want a bunch of stills, I'm with Salad, use Virtual Dub. Can't beat the price, its free.
FuTz wrote on 11/16/2002, 10:16 PM


*** "Premiere has this ability in that you can save to a filmstrip (.flm) file, which you can open in Photoshop. This is especially nice in the way of frame by frame editing (rotoscoping) The problem for me is..I would really use this feature but I hate, yes hate Premiere and refuse to become a user." ***

*** "OK..here's my point.

1. it should be just as easy to choose "export to image files" as to make an .avi

2. there are many reasons to want this feature.

a.) just like in 3d rendering, if you computer crashes, you don't have to re-
render the whole thing again. you just pick-up where you left off.

b.) i want to pull some frames of a character, then go into photoshop and "punch"
the character out of the scene. have you seen all the cool cartoon network
stuff? i'm betting they used a similar technique.

c.) what if you are doing something specialized, and you NEED to import an image
sequence (for whatever reason).


this is all to simple for me. i can't believe it's not in the program. " ***



I am soooooo much with you guys... And more: we should be able to export, too, to Photoshop. THAT would be paradise...
musicvid10 wrote on 11/17/2002, 12:05 PM
Yes, exporting a series of stills should be a feature in Vegas. In addition to VirtualDub, I like to use AVIEdit for this. It has the added advantage of using Photoshop 4 filters. The interface is a bit unconventional but worth the effort.