
Yeah, all of this work for 10 seconds of video.Īs I’m sure you’re already aware, it takes a bit of time to set up, shoot, and edit a proper stop motion shot. To achieve the popular blocky-style look, I shot 50 images to create a 5-second animation at 10 fps. The shot consists of a crumpled paper moving onscreen, uncrumpling, recrumpling, and then moving back off screen.

In that video, I show how to animate a basic paper crumple effect. In this quick guide, we’ll show you how.Ī while back, I produced a tutorial showing users how to get started creating stop motion videos. I added that video to the media pool, added it to the end of the sequence (without the audio), changed the speed to 10x (Change Clip Speed -> 1000%) and added audio.Īre you suggesting if I added second copies of the clips to the media pool, changed the speed there and basically did the whole trimming/editing sequence again at the end of the video I wouldn't get the issue I'm seeing? (I avoided this as it was a lot of work.Shooting a stop-motion project is difficult and time-consuming. This involved no speed changes, just trimming, adding audio and doing transitions. What I did was edited four separate clips together into a slow-motion sequence. Note I am new to Resolve so quite a non-expert user (although a course during your recent event in London has helped considerably). I'm currently running 12.5.6 as 14.beta3 did horrible things to my Windows computer. I don't have Premiere or After Effects (someone I was talking to yesterday suggested there was a very expensive plugin for the latter to do this).

Target is 10x speedup to make it normal speed (which I'm tagging on the end of all the slow-mos). It never existed as a 250fps file, was always written as 25fps. It was shot at 250fps, conformed to 25fps (10x slow motion).

I shot the video so have all the original material. What I want is to average 5-10 frames to give the impression of a 1/50th shutter speed. The problem I have is if I just speed up the clip it looks super-jumpy due to the 1/250th shutter speed. To clarify (I think you understand all this):
