Filmstrip export to photoshop

I have been exporting a sequence from Final cut to Tape re capturing on adobe premier pro expoting as filmstrip, importing to photoshop editing each frame, exporting to premier pro exporting to tape and re importing to final cut.
Does any body know an easier way please as there are no filmstrip export options in final cut.

g4 g5, Mac OS X (10.4.6)

Posted on May 26, 2006 6:49 AM

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6 replies

May 26, 2006 7:15 AM in response to David Harbsmeier

Wow, that's a convoluted work pattern ....

If you have already exported the file as a quicktime, you can do this in QT Player (w/the pro extentions) as well. It's the same command as in FCP -

Export>Image Sequence>Options

In addition to the format of the still, you can choose whether or not you want to export every frame or to skip frames.

Also, doesn't AE have some individual frame editing capablities?

good luck.
x

May 26, 2006 7:51 AM in response to nissan

Yes, I have actually used a much easier workflow method than what you're describing (although I used to do the Premiere>filmstrip>photoshop method for rotoscoping, and it was a pain).
Instead of using Photoshop (and going via Premiere), use ImageReady, which has most of the same features that Photoshop has in creating, drawing, rotoscoping, layer masks, etc. ImageReady is a subprogram within Photoshop, that you can navigate to from the bottom of your pallete menu.

1) Choose which raw QuickTime clip you're going to work on from your captured footage files--know the name of the raw clips, rather than your FCP-assigned clip names (if they're different).
2) Open up ImageReady (from within Photoshop).
3) In ImageReady, you will be able to open up a QuickTime file! (If you only need to work on a specific portion or section from your QT file, you can specify that when you open the file in ImageReady).
4) Once in ImageReady, you can navigate through your QT clip just like you would an animated GIF, and you can manipulate individual frames, draw on them, create layer masks, erase, cut & paste, etc. You can also assign multiple layers to each frame in the sequence.
5) To insure you don't lose anything during your editing/drawing process, keep saving the file--it'll save as a PSD file, actually.
6) When you're done manipulating your clip, EXPORT it as a Quicktime file again, and then you'll be able to import the new QuickTime file into FCP.

This will save a massive amount of time on your work flow, and will avoid having to bring things into Premiere as well as avoid using a filmstrip, which (by nature of large file sizes) can be cumbersome more processor-intensive.
I hope that helps!
-Chris

Aug 6, 2006 2:40 PM in response to Chris Julian

Hi,

Hope it's not too late to jump into this discussion. Please help.

I modified a small sequence of a FCP file using ImageReady and then Photoshop (to do more complex cartoony stuff that IR could not do). It created 117 layers that I modified individually.

I re-opened it in ImageReady and saw that all of my 117 layers were still there and looking exactly as I made them in Photoshop.

In ImageReady I re-saved the file and its layers as a Quicktime file to be able to import it back into FCP, but no go. I got no picture, not even the first layer.

I went back to IR and re-saved the file as a TIFF file, but got only one of the 117 layers to appear in my FCP sequence.

Can anyone please tell me what step(s) I omitted to make it so that all of the layers return back to their rightful place in FCP, even though they're a little more battered than before?

Thanks much.
sheila

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Filmstrip export to photoshop

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