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Participant
March 23, 2014
Question

Custom frame rate?

  • March 23, 2014
  • 4 replies
  • 39234 views

I am trying to acheive a stop motion like effect on my videos. I have right clicked on my sequence, selected sequence settings, changed editing mode to "custom", and then get a wider range of frames per second (10fps-60fps). But I need a lower fps than 10 to get a better looking stop motion effect. Possibly 6fps? I have tried right clicking footage, modify, interpret footage and then "assuming frame rate" but that gives a slow motion effect. This is in Premiere pro CC by the way. Thanks

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4 replies

Participant
March 11, 2021

If you want to make a stop motion video with 6 fps;

1. Set a timebase in multiples of 6 fps (for e.g: 30 fps)

2. Edit > Preferences > Timeline > Still Image Defult Duration > set as 5 Frames (because 30/6=5)

Now, every 6 photos takes 1 second

Formula:

Still Image Defult Duration = Timebase / you want  

 

minerios
Participant
August 30, 2020

Besides just achieving an effect look on your footage you can actually input custom framerates, but only if you have the AfterCodecs plugin as you can see in this article here by its developers: http://www.autokroma.com/blog/How-to-Export-Custom-Framerates-PPro-AME/

It is a neat solution for filling gaps on the Adobe's built in exporters.

Hope this helps!

June 2, 2015

I have a similar problem. For cutting an old silent movieI'd need to create a sequence with a framerate of 20 or 16 frames per second (as used in old 16mm cameras). Is there any possibility? Will Adobe do some implementation of this in future or do you know any workaround?

Many thanks!!

Inspiring
June 2, 2015

Same answer. Look under Effects > Time > Posterize Time

Apply the effect to the clip in the timeline, double-click the clip in the timeline to open in Source, go to Effects Controls and adjust Frame Rate as desired.

Colin Brougham 1
Adobe Employee
Adobe Employee
June 3, 2015

The film will be exported in different formats, the most important is

the tiff-sequence. That means that I could interprete the source as

24fps and edit the film in a higher speed. Theoretically.

But the problem is that I'd need to use the sequence for adding the

synchronized music, too. That means that the timebase of 16 or 18 frames

per second will be absolutely necessary and I can't do a workaround.

Unfortunately, there isn't even a multiple of 16 or 18 fps listed...

ADOBE, PLEASE, IMPLEMENT THIS OPTION AS SOON AS POSSIBLE and don't force

me to change to another software...;/


Why the TIFF sequence? Are you going back film with the edit sequence? I'm just trying to get a better handle of what you plan to do after export in order to make better recommendations. FWIW, TIFF sequence export doesn't include audio, anyway, so I presume you'd be synchronizing the picture and sound elsewhere later on.

Regarding other export frame rates, that's certainly not a common request, but the only way we hear them is if they're filed here: Adobe - Feature Request/Bug Report Form

shooternz
Legend
March 23, 2014

Change the clip within a normal framerate sequence to achieve this "effect".

There is an effect 'Posterise Time' ( IIRC)  that may suit you.