Seven
02-23-2005, 06:22 PM
Hi
Im currently working on my first animated short film. I have rendered out the various scenes in Maya as a series of still *.tga images. I then import these images into After effects, layer up the scene from the various layers I have rendered out and export this as a DV avi file.
I then import this avi into Premiere for editing. Now for some reason I need to slow each scene by 84% as to match up with the audio I have recorded. I dont know why I need to do this as when I was animating the audio synced up perfectly.
Anyway, I slow each scene by 84% in Premiere to match up with the audio. I then export this movie again to get the finished article.
However, when I export from Premiere I get a horrid echo of the last frame on the current frame in the video. This happens through out the entire sequence. Its like a continuous ghost image, the last image opac ontop of the current frame being shown.
I think it is doing this because I am stretching the frames when I am slowing it down. Is there any way to prevent this echo ? Surely if I slow the video down, it will just evenly space out each frame so each frame will appear on screen longer. It doesnt seem to be doing this.
Any help would be appreicated.
Sevv
Im currently working on my first animated short film. I have rendered out the various scenes in Maya as a series of still *.tga images. I then import these images into After effects, layer up the scene from the various layers I have rendered out and export this as a DV avi file.
I then import this avi into Premiere for editing. Now for some reason I need to slow each scene by 84% as to match up with the audio I have recorded. I dont know why I need to do this as when I was animating the audio synced up perfectly.
Anyway, I slow each scene by 84% in Premiere to match up with the audio. I then export this movie again to get the finished article.
However, when I export from Premiere I get a horrid echo of the last frame on the current frame in the video. This happens through out the entire sequence. Its like a continuous ghost image, the last image opac ontop of the current frame being shown.
I think it is doing this because I am stretching the frames when I am slowing it down. Is there any way to prevent this echo ? Surely if I slow the video down, it will just evenly space out each frame so each frame will appear on screen longer. It doesnt seem to be doing this.
Any help would be appreicated.
Sevv
