Obviously, I don't want to duplicate the complete effect sequence of swirling lines forming the outline of the character. I want to know how to achieve creating outlines of the characters with a solid background color and a solid outline color.
An effect I want to try.
- angelx03
- Joined: Tue Jan 21, 2003 7:13 pm
- Location: In school, Rochester NY mainly RIT; in home, Tampa, FL
An effect I want to try.
At this moment I only have Windows Movie Maker 2.1 and GIMP 2.0 at my disposal. Is there a way I could take an anime clip and duplicate this effect:

Obviously, I don't want to duplicate the complete effect sequence of swirling lines forming the outline of the character. I want to know how to achieve creating outlines of the characters with a solid background color and a solid outline color.
Obviously, I don't want to duplicate the complete effect sequence of swirling lines forming the outline of the character. I want to know how to achieve creating outlines of the characters with a solid background color and a solid outline color.
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trythil
- is
- Joined: Tue Jul 23, 2002 5:54 am
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http://www.amvwiki.org/index.php/Sketch is a good starting point. You can render the AVISynth output to a file and import it into your video editor.
If you want extreme manual control you can try Inkscape :)
If you want extreme manual control you can try Inkscape :)
- Keeper of Hellfire
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- Kalium
- Sir Bugsalot
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- risk one
- Joined: Sun Oct 13, 2002 4:47 pm
I'm sure the Gimp has some way to perform a series of actions on a set of images (I know Photoshop does). That way you can just export as bitmaps in vdub, apply the effect, and import as bitmaps in vdub again. It's still more work than AVS, but certainly nothing like rotoscoping.Kalium wrote:AVS has the large advantage of not forcing you to do it frame-by-frame.Keeper of Hellfire wrote:Or if you don't use AviSynth, in Gimp the Function Filters/Find Edges can do the same. Try the different ones, to see which fits best.
- bum
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- downwithpants
- BIG PICTURE person
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yay youre hooked.
maskandlayer()|My Guide to WMM 2.x
a-m-v.org Last.fm|<a href="http://www.frappr.com/animemusicvideosdotorg">Animemusicvideos.org Frappr</a>|<a href="http://tinyurl.com/2lryta"> Editors and fans against the misattribution of AMVs</a>
a-m-v.org Last.fm|<a href="http://www.frappr.com/animemusicvideosdotorg">Animemusicvideos.org Frappr</a>|<a href="http://tinyurl.com/2lryta"> Editors and fans against the misattribution of AMVs</a>
- Keeper of Hellfire
- Joined: Sun Jan 09, 2005 6:13 am
- Location: Germany
While it is true, doing it frame by frame has it's advantages too. You have more control over the result. You can change the filter settings for every frame to get the best results, erase unwanted lines, add missing ones, thicken ones that are too thin and so on.Kalium wrote:AVS has the large advantage of not forcing you to do it frame-by-frame.
And as I said, not everyone uses AviSynth. I got rid of it as fast as I had installed it, because after installing it the playback of video files was broke. And even if AviSynth develops and this problem may be fixed, the use of it has it's pro and cons. And at the moment the cons for me have more weight than the pros.




