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KEN BURNS EFFECT: to the next level?Posted by stewgoddard
I know of Ken Burns / Civil War Docos: But I've never watched any of them. I've read about his "Effect": which I beilieve takes a photograph and turns it into a pan/zoom shot.
Lately I've seen this type of edit (on Speed TVs show: The Motocross Files). But it' taken to another level, by the edit to include layering (I'm guessing). EXAMPLE: By taking a photo of a guy riding a motorcycle and creating one layer (only the outlind of the guy/bike: everything else transparent), and the 2nd layer the background. By making the background move/pan, and zoom into the guy/bike - makes for a great effect... I'm very new to FCP, is this effect something possible in FCP/PS? If so, anyone know of a post that gives the "How To:"?
You are talking about an effect that was first made famous in a documentary (sort of) called The Kid Stays in The Picture. There was a tutorial on this out there somewhere a few years back. It mostly relies on the 3D space of AfterEffects or anything similar. (Motion maybe, I don't know, Shake is likely)
Basically it requires doing what you said but the grunt work is filling in the background where the foreground used to be so that when the viewing angle changes the BG appears continuous and distinct from the FG and noticeably further away from the viewer. ak Sleeplings, AWAKE! ![]()
I guess you can fudge DOF by blurring the background layer. You can also fake a focus rack by animating the blurs on the individual layers. You can also get away with not using a camera, but the layers still have to be animated in X (the example below was done without a camera, but the layers are laid out in AE in Z-depth).
CLICK FOR EXAMPLE IMHO, it's easier to lay it all out in Z & animate the camera properties ![]() Joey When life gives you dilemmas...make dilemmanade. ![]()
Plus, you could really do this whole thing with PS and FCP, if you had the time, skill and patience. Scaling, distortion and keying the blurs could fake the z space to some extent if you really needed it, but you don't actually need to go into that to get the effect of the foreground picture slipping at a different rate to the background.
Just cut it out in PS, rebuild the background with the clone stamp, then bring them into FCP as a layered psd. Then keyframe the moves of each layer separately. There's a tutorial I did on the Queer Eye effect that explains some of the methods you would need to achieve this particular look, and the rest should be fairly obvious. The 'Queer Eye' effect ![]()
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