User Guide

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ADOBE AFTER EFFECTS 5.0
User Guide
Opening footage in its original application
You can open and edit a footage item in the application in which it was created, directly
from an After Effects project. The original application must be installed on the computer
you are using, and there must be enough unused RAM for it to run. When you edit and
save changes to the footage in the original application, the changes are applied to all
instances of the footage in the After Effects project the next time you open the project.
When you edit a still-image sequence selected in the Timeline or Composition windows,
After Effects opens the individual image that is currently displayed. When you edit a still-
image sequence selected in the Project window, the first image in the sequence opens.
To open a footage item in the original application:
1 In the Project window, Composition window, or Timeline window, select the footage
or a layer containing the footage. If you selected a still-image sequence from the Compo-
sition or Timeline window, move the current-time marker to the frame displaying the still
image you want to edit.
2 Choose Edit > Edit Original.
3 Edit the footage in its original application, and save the changes.
Note: If youre editing footage that has an alpha channel, make sure that you’re viewing and
editing all the channels, including the alpha channel, in the other application. Otherwise,
changes you make might not be applied to the alpha channel, and it may become misaligned
with the color channels.
If your project is open when you make a change to a footage file, After Effects can reload
the new version of the file while the project is open.
To reload an edited file:
1 In After Effects, select the footage file in the Project window.
2 Choose File > Reload Footage.
Setting the frame rate for footage
You can change the frame rate for any movie or sequence of still images. For example, you
can import a sequence of ten still images and specify a frame rate of 5 frames per
second (fps).
UG.book Page 95 Wednesday, February 21, 2001 12:05 PM