![]() ![]() ![]() And that is what I did and what you say above is how I did it. The way it has always worked and still works - when not using an image sequence - is to add one, change its Duration in Properties, click Set Default next to Duration, then add all the others to the playlist. So what duration value do I need to give to get Shotcut to show an image for 1/24 of a second because 0.4 is not it. A value of 0:04 takes 7 seconds, instead of 2, for 48 slides. For example, a value of 1:00 takes 60 seconds to show 60 images while a value of 0:23 takes 59 seconds. With respect to images, FF certainly does not appear to mean the number of frames. Question: I’ve been trying to find some doc re the math of the HH:MM:SS:FF format but have had no luck Specifically why does stepping through the values (starting at zero) jump from 00:00:00:23 to 00:00:01:00 for duration? This is what happens when the value of 24 is entered. FF is not what someone would expect to see as the next 2 digit field in that sequence. This is certainly not obvious.Īnd if you want the first image to display for a longer period of time, it appears that you need to first add it - and it alone - to the timeline, set it’s display duration using the drag feature (couldn’t find a way to specify the actual duration I wanted to use since duration is no longer editable), and then add all the additional images.Īlso thanks for the tip about HH:MM:SS:FF. Once you add one or more additional objects, duration is no longer editable. I now see that duration can only be edited when there is only a single object in the playlist. Step 1 - yes all images were in filename sequence. ![]()
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