Jump to content

Snow FX Help


Max DeGroot

Recommended Posts

I just started using VideoPad a few days ago, and I am amazed at its power, considering the price.

I am using VideoPad Professional v 8.42

There are three of things with the snow effect I would like, and perhaps someone here knows how to do it.

1) Presently, the snow effect begins at the top, with nothing, and then slowly fills the screen as the snow falls. Is there any way to have the snow already falling when the clip begins?
2) Presently the snow only falls vertically. Is there any way to have it fall at an angle? Such as: you are inside a car that is travelling. The snow falling outside should be falling at a steep angle.
3) Is there a way to have the effect continue from one clip to the next without interruption, such as when I want to fade between to similar images.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1.  You might overlay a black clip that starts a second or two ahead of the desired snow video.  Apply a green screen effect, using black, and the snow effect.  That will start the snow in black but be full snow in the screen when it hits the clip.  If necessary that clip can be exported, reimported, trimmed to get rid of the black, then inserted into the project.

2.  Adding a blank, black overlay clip, then rotating and scaling it up to fill the screen and applying a green screen can achieve this...to a point.  The example here shows how snow was added across two clips.  Double-click it to see more detail.

3. Same as #2, with scaling and rotation optional.

The snow can be speeded up by via a right-click on its track to CHANGE CLIP SPEED.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Max

"...1) Presently, the snow effect begins at the top, with nothing, and then slowly fills the screen as the snow falls. Is there any way to have the snow already falling when the clip begins?..."

One of the faults with both Snow and Snowflake effect is that the parameters cannot be used with keyframes. "Snow" cannot be increased from no flakes to a blizzard in one clip. Owing to the effect being basically a scroll means that the screen starts with no snow which then falls as the clip progresses. I have mentioned this to NCH in the past. (In fact I suggested the possibility of snow just after last Christmas following a flurry of questions regarding how one could do it. ..At the time it could be simulated by creating a scrolling text screen of full stops and  ** :))

However despite the limitations, in reply to your question. You can, with a bit of fiddling start with the snow already falling. Here is the basic idea....You will need to adjust the parameters to suit your particular needs of course. Use the Snow effect rather than Snowflakes as the latter, although you can make them sway etc. are largely empty space sprites and therefore won't green screen very well. (Although check it out by all means ...)

Proceed then as follows...

  • Place a black blank image on Video track 1
  • Extend it to 20 seconds
  • Click the FX Add a Snow effect with the following parameters: (These are simple example values but work reasonably)
  • aa.jpg
  • Export the clip (e.g.as Snow.mp4) and then clear the timeline.
  • Load the background clip to Video Track 1
  • Load the exported "snow" clip to Video Track 2
  • Split Video Track 2 at the point where the falling snow fills the screen (around 4 seconds or so from the start) and delete the left hand section.
  • Close the gap.
  • Add a Green Screen effect to the "snow" clip on Video Track 2 using black as the target colour.
  • Set the Threshold value to 0. (Otherwise the "snow" may not be seen)
  • Add a short fade in at the start of the "snow" clip if required.

By adding a speed change to the clip the "snow" can be made to fall faster or slower. By dragging "snow" clip from the timeline to the clip bin you can create a copy. Drop the clips back on separate overlay tracks. (which retain their transparency .re-add the fade in) and by staggering the starts  of the different clips on each overlay track you can increase the "snow" gradually


".....2) Presently the snow only falls vertically. Is there any way to have it fall at an angle? Such as: you are inside a car that is travelling. The snow falling outside should be falling at a steep angle........"

Having created your "snow" clip you can follow the steps above adding a Green Screen as described but also add a Rotation effect to alter the angle of the snow. This however reduces the area of the clip so you will also need to add a Scale effect but only to the Horizontal component so it now stretches to fill the screen from side to side. This will work OK but the "flakes" cease to fall down now. In effect the "scroll" is horizontal. It's probably best therefore to limit the angle to around 30 degrees or so. (or the complimentary angle from 360)  Try these settings for all three effects...

bb.jpg


".....3) Is there a way to have the effect continue from one clip to the next without interruption, such as when I want to fade between to similar images......."

As you are using a Video Track 2 clip in these suggestions ---a "snow" clip that is identical  throughout,  it can be easily overlayed  onto as many Track 1 clips as required. It can also be lengthened by adding copies of itself as many times as required as mentioned above.

Hope this helps

Nat

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...