Comments

cpc000cpc wrote on 1/19/2011, 12:43 AM

rbaczenas,

 

Two options I can think of to give the effect, depending on your source material:

 

If you have a normal speed video clip go to 'Effects' tab >> 'Video effects' >> 'Speed' and speed things up. You can only double the speed if there is linked audio, but there seems to be no limit with video alone. The slider (in VPX) only goes to 4X but you can enter a higher number in the box. I just checked and 50X worked ok.

 

If you have a series of still images taken at appropriate intervals you can import them all and set their lengths to one frame each, or whatever you need to give the desired speed.

 

Regards,

Carl

 

fishycomics wrote on 1/19/2011, 7:17 PM

As we learn that is what I found out not to long ago, just remember to ungroup video/sound  for extended  speed.

fryfly321 wrote on 9/21/2011, 3:57 PM

 

 

If you have a series of still images taken at appropriate intervals you can import them all and set their lengths to one frame each, or whatever you need to give the desired speed.

 

Regards,

Carl

 

I have tried doing this with my photos, but i get a cut in between every image, its as if the screen is flashing every image, is there a way to make it run more smoother.

 

 

starosta wrote on 1/17/2013, 7:57 PM

I use GoPro's Cineform Studio to first "convert" all the sequential photos into an AVI file.  Then I import the AVI file into MEP for video work.  Cineform Studio is distributed for free to any users on the GoPro website.  The only drawback, if it can be called that, is that Cineform Studio will crash your Movie Edit Pro, if you try and run them simultaneously.  I haven't figured out why that is, but it's not really a problem for me... I just run the two programs separately.

fishycomics wrote on 1/21/2013, 4:22 PM

the question you asked was , can you do  time lapse video, meaning place a video in, and speed it up?  Or place in stills, to make it a video to make it a movie