10 easy steps to bullet dodging in Premiere
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- Posting Freak
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10 easy steps to bullet dodging in Premiere
This is a simple way to have your actors dodging bullets in Premiere.
1. Film your actors.
2. Take a few pictures of a bullet.
3. Capture the tape to PC and put the pics on PC.
4. Edit bullet pics in photo-editing program, to take out the shell and place black back ground (or green or blue).
5. Bring the pics and video up in Premiere.
6.Place video on track 1 and place bullet pic on track 2 or whatever.
7. Slow down video to whatever you want.
8. Use transparency and motion with the bullet pic to set beginning position of bullet and ending position.
9. At beginning position set ZOOM to 0 and ending position set ZOOM to however big you want.
10. Set speed on bullet track as fast or slow you want (and of course render the thing) and you got it.
I hope this tutorial helped you as well as teach you how to munipulate Premiere in many ways, good luck making movies.
1. Film your actors.
2. Take a few pictures of a bullet.
3. Capture the tape to PC and put the pics on PC.
4. Edit bullet pics in photo-editing program, to take out the shell and place black back ground (or green or blue).
5. Bring the pics and video up in Premiere.
6.Place video on track 1 and place bullet pic on track 2 or whatever.
7. Slow down video to whatever you want.
8. Use transparency and motion with the bullet pic to set beginning position of bullet and ending position.
9. At beginning position set ZOOM to 0 and ending position set ZOOM to however big you want.
10. Set speed on bullet track as fast or slow you want (and of course render the thing) and you got it.
I hope this tutorial helped you as well as teach you how to munipulate Premiere in many ways, good luck making movies.
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- Posting Freak
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Thanx for the guide, but I still couldn't see (once I removed the greenscreen on the bullet) where the bullet was in relation to the background footage? Guessing I didn't do something correctly!
Think it would work well though, I actually just tried this, but ended up using AE to move the bullet using keyframes and was very simple to do.
Think it would work well though, I actually just tried this, but ended up using AE to move the bullet using keyframes and was very simple to do.
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- justsomeguy
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- videoman7790
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use blender, its a free 3d rendering program. it takes awhile to get used to it, but you can do alot with it.
http://www.blender3d.com/
http://www.blender3d.com/