Maybe make the the video without the game footage first. Like put all the anime scenes you want at the parts you need.The Wired Knight wrote:Ok so I've got a problem; turns out the footage I captured to my computer is no good. Due to teh screwy method one ahs to go about getting GC footage I recorded it to my camera and then used Vdub to get the footage off of it onto my computer.
However, while this seems to have rendered decent AVIs the files work for shit on my computer. Everytime I work with it in premiere it typically crashes before I can even get one clip in. (This is not the case for the Last Exile footage I'm using). I can't figure otu what's wrong and I KNOW it's not the file size because the largest one is only 37 megs.
So I can only see three options
1. Make a video that uses NO video game footage (I'd rather not do this as it doesn't make sense considering the project)
2. Find another way to get the footage; however this means I have to find DVDs that can get to me ASAP or somethign else that has to be very fast and still efficient.
3. Drop out of the project alltogether.
Need input on this one because I'm at an impase; I've got 40 seconds done but nothing else because I cannot proceed with how AP is acting up.
I would actually recommend not using vdub to capture and using the actual camera software to capture. You can use vdub to convert the captured footage into huffy.
If you can, try to get the rendered avis into vdub or vdub mod and convert them to huffy, what codec does your camera render in?
Or do it the loooong way. You encode the rendered avis in tmpeg and reconvert them into avi with vdub/vdub mod