Timelapse in Premiere Pro 5

jason 21 Nov 2010 17:41
He's tring to time lapse a sequence of photos not video.
stefgo 22 Nov 2010 04:28
You have been using a preset for PAL DV, which is interlaced and anamorphic (i.e. it has a field order and pixels are not square/1.0).

What you need to do for your time-lapse, assuming that your edited images are already cropped to a 16:9 (display) aspect ratio, is change

-video codec to photo jpeg
-field type to none/progressive *
-(pixel) aspect to square / 1 / 1.0 *

*depending on how Premiere puts it.

The rest of the settings are ok.

Like wideweb said, Quicktime Pro 7 can also render your edited images into a time-lapse video (open image sequence and export to quicktime movie).

Good luck,
Stefan
istankov 22 Nov 2010 20:33
Hvala Stefane, probaću
(thanks Stefan, I'll try)
wayweroll 25 Nov 2010 00:44
By far the simplest and the best app for creating time-lapse is Quicktime Pro. You need Quicktime 7 (a free download) and then pay the $40 to make it pro.

You put your stills into a folder then choose 'create image sequence'. You select a frame rate and then it's done!

You can then just select 'save as' and it will save it as a photojpg file, although is will keep the same dimensions as the original stills, which is probably too big.

You can choose export and save it in many other formats. Choose Prores if you have a FCP workflow. Here you can also select the dimensions in pixels.

After export, you can then add sound or edit the movie in Premeier, etc.

After lots of trial and error, I've found Quicktime Pro works the best.
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