![]() avi file in Premiere and it's definitely not transparent. Whenever the video doesn't save with transparency, the transparent bits kinda get filled in with black, and it makes the edges of the non-transparent lines very pixely. frame%4d.png -r 12 -c:v huffyuv transparent_test_avi.aviĮven when I saved the video as a webm like your original example, I don't think it was saving with the transparency. Hmm, I tried that, but it's still saving without the transparency: ffmpeg -i. Took a while, but I got there eventually, haha avi, which supports transparency, from the Preview window. I did manage to find another way to save transparent animations! It also requires saving out the frames as transparent images, and then they can be imported into OpenToonz, which is an animation program, and from there they can be saved as a. movs, and since I would be using Premier with those transparent animations, it's unfortunately pointless if I can't even import that type of file.īut regardless, thank you for all the help and info! Your original video was really helpful in explaining what all commands meant, which did really help when I tried using ffmpeg to save different video formats! I've been testing out the transparency by importing the video files into Premiere Pro and placing them over a colored rectangle, but I can't seem to import. avi! I did try out the qtrle encoder like you recommended, but I'm not actually sure if it worked or not. mp4, haha, I guess I got it confused with a. I think I'll still use it since I don't necessarily save out transparent animations often, but it would have been nice to have that option.Īnd you're right about the mp4s, I've never actually saved out a transparent animation as a. Yeah, I found out that Krita doesn't save transparent animations as I was researching stuff last night. mov will work, then you can use the qtrle encoder (above) and that should give you something similar. Mp4: According to the Adobe forums, the mp4 container does not support an alpha channel. frame%4d.png -c:v qtrle -b:v 1M -auto-alt-ref 0 -pix_fmt argb output.mov (in this case, auto-alt-ref may be unnecessary) MOV: Specifying "pix_fmt argb" produces an MOV file using the qtrle encoder ffmpeg -r -i. I've done a bit of testing with FFMpeg's encoders and found that this method also works for MOV: What I've posted here is a bit of a workaround - you export the frames as transparent images and then use ffmpeg to collect those into a video with a pixel format that supports transparency. ![]() It will save transparent images, but it doesn't seem to have a way to transfer those images directly to ffmpeg to render out the video. Unfortunately it doesn't seem like Krita supports exporting directly as a transparent animation. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |