Ive looked at Zarxrax's tutorial and other websites, even Adobe's tutorial but I have been unable to find an answer. Basically I import my entire amv into AE and I want to apply effects to it, however whenever I apply the effect to the video it affects the entire video (which is what I expected), but I want it only to apply to one point in the video. I am familiar with keyframes and I know you can change the values of an effect, but that doesnt mean the effect will turn off. I guess what Im asking is that is there a way to turn effects on and off, like keyframing the effect, so it only affects certain parts of the video you want. I know in Premiere Pro I just cut a segment of the video I want the effect to affect and apply the effect to that segment.
I hope this question makes sense, let me know if you need clarification
Thanks!
Adobe After Effects Question...
- OhmGautama
- Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2003 7:01 pm
- Location: North Carolina
Adobe After Effects Question...
"Freedom discovers man the moment he loses concern over what impression he is making or about to make"
- Purge
- Joined: Mon Oct 10, 2005 9:18 am
- Location: Under Aus
for a simple way
theres no reason why you cant use the same vid track twice. drag your amv movie file into the timeline so you have two or more layers. you can simply then cut the part of video you want the effect applied so that the footage you only want to see with the effect is visable.
for more messier stuff you should use mulitple compsitions -
theres no reason why you cant use the same vid track twice. drag your amv movie file into the timeline so you have two or more layers. you can simply then cut the part of video you want the effect applied so that the footage you only want to see with the effect is visable.
for more messier stuff you should use mulitple compsitions -
- Brad
- Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2000 9:32 am
- Location: Chicago, IL
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Technically yes you can, but honestly, I'd wholeheartedly recommend just taking that specific clip from your Premiere timeline (or whatever program you're using), export that as a Huffyuv, and just bring it into AE, do your effects, export it back into Huffyuv, bring it back in Premiere, and replace the original. Gives you far more options and won't have you re-exporting your entire video from AE.
- OhmGautama
- Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2003 7:01 pm
- Location: North Carolina