So another plug-in that you don’t need until you do, and when you do it is great to know it is there.
Now the main use for this plug-in is for work with 3D imagery. If instead of rendering Motion blur in a 3D image, you have the 3D artist render you a motion vectors pass, then with this plug-in you can add motion blur after the fact and have full control over it, which is a huge thing, and absolutely necessary, but that is only scratching the surface of what this can do.
This plug in can automatically track every pixel in an image and add realistic motion blur, and you can control the amount. Blur can also be removed. This doesn’t sound like much but it really is. Especially if you are given say footage that is high speed which then has very little motion blur, and you are running at normal speed. The footage just won’t look right because of the lack of motion blur, and adding in motion blur can make the footage look normal and correct.
Now once again there are 2 versions, the normal for $109.95 and the pro for $269.95, the pro lets you do object separation using matts, track points, alphas and simple splines and the aforementioned 3D motion Vector Input.
Once installed it shows up in your Re:Vision Plug-ins folder
If you have a good GPU turn on GPU to speed things up and you can control the amount of blur by using the blur amount control. This Goes up to 10, or can down to -2 to remove motion blur.
I have made a quick little video using the same footage of my Shar Pei Boba Fetch as the last video on Re:Vision Effects Twixtor. This time I show the 59.94 footage playing at normal speed in a 23.976 timeline and then adding in more motion blur, we have it at the default .50 at 1.0 and at 2.0.
Once again not the ideal footage or a demo, but some of my own footage, so I can use it, and you can certainly see the effects.
While Premiere has the ability to slow down your footage, and it has a newer higher quality version called Optical Flow (called Pixel Motion in After Effects). It is certainly better than plain frame blending, but it is not the highest quality slow motion you can get. For the highest quality post slow motion the answer has always been the expensive but worth it TWIXTOR from Re:Vision Effects.
Clip speed in Premiere Pro is in the Clip Menu.
This brings up the Speed Panel, and for best results select Optical Flow from the drop down menu.
Twixtor comes in 2 versions, Standard and Pro and is available for a variety of platforms. The version I use is the After Effects/Premiere Pro version. The standard version is $329.95 and the Pro version is $595.00, both fairly expensive, but as I have said quite worth it.
The Pro version gives you the ability to really tweak what the auto track does, lets you use matte’s and alphas to enhance your tracks, as well as splines, and the ability to work with motion vectors from a 3D system. If you have a really important shot to slow down the Pro version is certainly worth the extra money, though you may get away with the normal version. And they have video based tutorials for their effects on their sites, and they are really worth going into to learn the ins and outs.
Twixtor shows up in your Video Effects RE:Vision Plugs-Ins (RSMB is ReelSmart Motion Blur which I plan on talking about in a later post).
The first thing to realize when working with twixtor is it works based on the whole clip as it can see it, so to specify the in points you need to Nest (in Premiere or Pre-Compose in After Effects) and in the sequence the sequence needs to be longer to work on the extent of the clip, so you might want to double or triple your clip in that nest/pre-comp.
This is the clip in the sequence with playhead parked on first frame
First frame of clip I want to slow.
Twixtor Effect Added
Speed Changed to 20%
First frame becomes first frame of clip.
So nest your clip in timeline
If you want clip longer as slow, you need to lengthen it, so double clip next to open. Since I want 20% speed, I duplicate clip 5 times.
Put twixtor on Nest in original sequence.
Here are the settings I am using. I always use GPU as I have a decent one and that speeds things up, but it is much slower within Premiere than within After Effects. Different settings will give you different results, so play around for sure. I ususally got for Motion Weighted and Smart Blend, and add a little Motion blur Compensation though it really slows things down. I have also set my Image Prep to Delinearize.
I did a video to demonstrate, it is UHD and shot 59.94 but is in a 23.976 Sequence, I have shown the footage as if 23.967, then slowed down, then slowed down to 20% using Premiere Pro’s time interpolation with Frame Sampling then Frame Blending, then optical flow and with Twixtor. This isn’t ideal footage, but Twixtor still looks the best. Of course this is recompressed by YouTube, but you should get the idea.