Topic awaiting preservation: Post Render/Animate Processing (Page 1 of 1) |
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Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: westernesse |
posted 10-05-2001 13:12
I've been working on an animtaion for some art/graphics coursework, i've been using 3d Studio 3.1 for a while now but i've never really done animations before. |
Paranoid (IV) Mad Scientist From: Somewhere over the rainbow |
posted 10-05-2001 13:23
The poster has demanded we remove all his contributions, less he takes legal action. |
Nervous Wreck (II) Inmate From: Switzerland |
posted 10-05-2001 16:43
IMHO saving each picture of a sequence to a seperate file is only useful for network rendering. Because Max is unable to put the diffrent rendering jobs directly into a .avi file. Therefor each Computer on the network renders its frame and puts it into a directory. Then you collect them and put them together. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Houston(ish) Texas |
posted 10-05-2001 16:56
Professionals do render to individual frames. |
Paranoid (IV) Inmate From: westernesse |
posted 10-06-2001 11:01
cheers guys, rendering individual frames is quite good if you haven't got a clue what to do with the avi codecs, i mean you can just load the sequence up in the RAM player and watch it there hehe. |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: :morF |
posted 10-08-2001 15:34
No, not jpegs. JPEGs, since they employ compression, are gonna do funny things to your image. As someone once told me, they like to forget certain colours to save space. I suggest a non compressed one if you want ultra quality, like (and I shudder to think of the HDD space this is gonna take up) a BITMAP image. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Houston(ish) Texas |
posted 10-08-2001 16:45
Use TIFFs or TGAs. They both use lossless compression. Bit bigger than a JPG, but far smaller than a BMP. |
Lunatic (VI) Mad Scientist From: Massachusetts, USA |
posted 10-08-2001 18:23
PNG is decent, too. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Houston(ish) Texas |
posted 10-08-2001 18:37
I don't think a lot of video editing software will accept PNGs yet. I haven't checked in the latest versions, but when I first started using them, you had to use numbered sequences of TGAs or TIFFs. Since Max can output an animation as a numbered sequence, it makes things very easy |
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist From: :morF |
posted 10-09-2001 16:43
Das: Where do you select to output to a numbered sequence? I haven't seen that as of yet. |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Houston(ish) Texas |
posted 10-09-2001 16:52
I'll have to look it up when I get home. I don't have Max on my work PC. |