Hi ugg_ffm
Are you still facing this problem? If not, let us know how you solved it. If so, please let us know so we can assist you further.
Thanks,
Kevin
Hi Kevin,
thanks for the follow-up.
I did a little research and made a test clip to see how "Frame Blending" works in both faster-than-original and slower-than-original:
In slow motion, Frame Blending fades from one source frame to the next over a couple of target frames – as one would expect.
For timelapse, Frame Blending superimposes multiple frames into one, with source frames closer in time being more prominent in the target frame than source frames more distant in time. (Writing this, I realize pictures would make that more clear …)
Also, the source time segment seems to be always significantly larger than necessary. So, for example, if you speed up to 9 times the original speed, Frame Blending – instead of taking 9 times the target time segment – takes a source segment 10 times or 12 times larger to blend frames together. (I did not measure exactly, because at that point I already knew I would not use Frame Blending.)
Unfortunately, this is not how a real exposure works: Every instant of time is represented with the same "weight" or prominence within the time range. (Best seen in the long motion blur streaks of light sources in nighttime long exposures – the lights show as streaks of a single brightness; not brighter in the timewise middle of their appearance.) So in a long exposure, which I basically aim to recreate, every frame of the source target rate should be equally visible/blended.
Also, when I speed up to 9 times the original, I expect the blending source time range to be 9 times the original – not more.
To get my desired "long exposure", I disabled Frame Blending (and set back to Frame Sampling), and applied the time "Echo" effect before precomping the clip and speeding it up:
Parameters for Echo effect:
Echo Time equals 1 divided by the number of frames per second of the source clip. (In my case: 1 / 60 [fps] = 0.01667.)
Number of Echoes equals the number of frames I want to cover minus one. (So for combining 9 frames, I want the current frame plus 8 echoes.)
Starting Intensity equals 1 divided by the Number of Echoes. (Which would be 1 / 8 = 0.125. Actually, I set the value slightly lower, to almost "1 divided by (Number of Echoes minus 1)", because otherwise I observed clipping of the bright whites in the result which I don't know where that came from.)
Decay must be 0, so that together with "Starting Intensity" every blended frame is represented with equal intensity, like in a long exposure.
I can't look it up right now and I don't remember the Blend Mode, but I seem to remember it to be "Blend" (maybe) or rather "Screen". (I checked by disabling and enabling the effect and see if the image retained the same brightness.)
After that, I precomposed the clip together with its effect and sped the resulting composition layer up to 9 times its original speed. I could fine-control wich result frame would be displayed by shifting the footage layer framewise in its precomp – because with this method, I only get one "correct" frame with only its same-burst neighbours blended into it, and 8 waste frames which have neighbours from other bursts blended into them.