Mailing List AE-List@media-motion.tv ? Message #42259
From: Dann Stubbs <dann@darkskydigital.com>
Subject: Re: [AE] Fastest way to render image sequence as mov
Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2012 08:06:18 -0500
To: After Effects Mail List <AE-List@media-motion.tv>
it's been a long time since i've tried - but i seem to recall photoshop being able to save to a mov file - so you could make a droplet that would take an image sequence and save out to mov

at least it'd be drag and drop and from what i remember years ago photoshop seemed to be pretty decent at working with large folders of images (at least in regard to droplets to do image conversions to different formats etc)

may be just one more option to try?

dann
___________________________________________________________________

Dann Stubbs  -  dann@darkskydigital.com
Dark Sky Digital -  http://www.darkskydigital.com

http://www.RenderKing.com  Value Priced C4D, VRAY Render Farm
___________________________________________________________________



On Feb 23, 2012, at 3:35 AM, Chris Zwar wrote:

> Well what an anticlimax!
>
> Firstly I discovered that you need CS 5.5 in order to import an image sequence into Adobe Media Encoder.  We're on CS 5.0, so no luck there.
>
> Then I discovered that whatever Adobe package is on my machine, it doesn't include Premiere Pro.  So no luck there.
>
> Likewise it doesn't have Final Cut or Compressor, so no luck there.
>
> I thought I'd try FFmpegX - the Mac gui front end to ffmpeg, but it doesn't support image sequences either.  I didn't have the time today to figure out how to use ffmpeg from the command line, so I'll save that for a rainy day.
>
> Opening up the sequence in Quicktime Pro takes AGES, possibly longer than the image sequence runs for anyway, and unless I stand there with a stop watch there's no easy way to benchmark Quicktime Pro, as you'd have to include the incredibly long time it takes to open the sequence before you can begin exporting it.  But in my case of opening a 20 minute 1920x1080 image sequence, it took about 30 minutes just to open the sequence, which is a very long time to wait before you can even begin to export it...  I don't know how long it took to actually export, as again you'd need a stopwatch to measure it accurately.  But it definitely wasn't faster than real-time...
>
> Inside AE CS5.0, with multiprocessors on and AE utilising 6 of them, the image sequence begins to render very quickly.  Initially AE predicts a total rendering time of 30 minutes (for a 20 minute video).  This is looking pretty good until about 1/3 of the way through, and then AE begins to slow down.  And then it slows down more.  The further through the render it gets, the slower it renders.  Eventually it finishes in 62 minutes.  But I'd guess that it took about 30 minutes to render the first 80%, and another 30 minutes to render the last 20%.  This is on a freshly booted 8-core machine with no other apps running, 16GB ram.
>
> I said in my original post that converting image sequences to quikcktime is not one of AE's strengths.  But I may have been wrong, because so far it's the best I've got!
>
>
> -Chris
>
> On 23/02/2012, at 4:23 AM, Phil Spitler wrote:
>
>> I will be interested in seeing your results from the ffmpeg test.
>>
>> Great tip, thanks Lloyd.
>>
>> Phil
>>
>>
>> Phil Spitler |   Associate Creative Director  |  Bonfire  Labs  |  t : 415.394.8200  |  c : 415.571.3139  |  Bonfirelabs.com
>>
>> On Feb 22, 2012, at 3:46 AM, Chris Zwar wrote:
>>
>>> Thanks all... I have completely overlooked Adobe Media Encoder.  I've installed FFmpeg and will benchmark them both this week.
>>> I do normally just use Quicktime Pro and have several encodes running simultaneously, however when I have to encode a single 20 minute image sequence into a H264 as fast as possible I'd like to know what the best solution is.
>>>
>>> I'll let you know what I discover...
>>>
>>>
>>> -Chris
>>>
>>> On 22/02/2012, at 11:31 AM, Steve Oakley wrote:
>>>
>>>> adobe media encoder... or prem pro as it supports img sequences. load as clip, export.
>>>>
>>>> s
>>>>
>>>> On Feb 21, 2012, at 5:05 PM, Jim Curtis wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> You can do multiple simultaneous exports with QT Pro, and max out your multi-core pretty quickly.  
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Feb 21, 2012, at 5:02 PM, Chris Zwar wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Just looking for some advice as to the fastest way to convert an image sequence to a quicktime?  This isn't one of AE's strengths.
>>>>>> Usually I'm happy with Quicktime Pro, but I'm currently working on a 20minute video at 1920x1080 and any speed increases will be valuable.  Because we have a render farm everything is based on image sequences - currently we're using JPGs at max quality.
>>>>>> I'm on a Mac, and usually rendering to h264.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Cheers,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> -Chris
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
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>
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