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Steal Adobe Photoshop Filters for After Effects Animations

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STEP 1: Batch your AE sequence in Photoshop

One way to apply Photoshop filters to After Effects frames is to render a sequence, then batch that sequence within Photoshop, applying a Photoshop Action script to each frame in the animation.

First, within After Effects’ Output Module (within the Render Queue), select your favorite sequence method. I use TIFF sequence. Once the sequentially numbered files are rendered to their own folder, all you have to do is open Photoshop, then select File -> Automate -> Batch. Within the Batch dialog, you can apply your favorite Action Script to every file in the folder.

STEP 2: Set up a custom automation

Before you set up a custom automation in Photoshop, you first need to describe an Action in Photoshop. To open the Actions Window in Photoshop CS, use Option-F9. Create a new Action by clicking the small page icon in the bottom of the Actions Window. Then, simply go through the Photoshop steps necessary to add the desired filter (or filters) to the layer. Photoshop will save the steps that you take, including the parameters for each filter applied. Because you can save multiple filters within Photoshop’s filter gallery, it’s easy to build up complex filter Actions very quickly.

STEP 3: Apply scripts to a single image or an entire folder

With an Action described, select Automate -> Batch from the file pulldown menu. Apply the specific script to a single document, or to an entire folder of images.

STEP 4: Import it all back into AE

Once Batch has applied your Photoshop process to your sequence, you can import the frames back into After Effects to use in a composition. Alternatively, you may wish to simply gather them in order to render a movie. (Don’t forget QuickTime Pro lets you open a sequence and save it as a regular QuickTme Movie.)

STEP 5: Try it another way with the Filmstrip file format

The second method of rendering your After Effects composition for import into Photoshop is the Filmstrip file format. Filmstrip is a compiling technique that places a series of frames into one ".flm" file, which can then be opened in Photoshop and edited as one document. Opening the.flm file in Photoshop reveals tags that After Effects has placed in between each frame. The grey strip tells After Effects how to discern the individual frames when you import the file back into AE. But be sure that you never crop or change the image/canvas size of the.flm file or blur the edge of the grey box into the image or delete/obliterate the grey bar.

STEP 6: Create a Filmstrip

These files can get really big. There is no compression on the image. Each.flm will render to be the size of a "none" QuickTime of the same duration. Each frame of the animation is spread out across (top-to-bottom) a massive canvas. To create a Photoshop Filmstrip, you’ll need to change the save format in After Effects’ Output Module. When creating a movie from a project, select the Output Module, and select "Filmstrip" from the format pull-down menu.

STEP 7: Preserve your grey bar

When you render the sequence, there is an easy way to preserve the grey bar. Render your composition with all layers turned off. Select "Filmstrip." Select "RGB+Alpha" in the Channels/Video Output portion of the Output Module. This gives you a clean sequence of black frames and grey reference bars. The.flm file also contains the alpha channel for the grey bar. You can use it to cut and paste all of the bars over your effected/filtered image.flm file.

STEP 8: Open the file in Photoshop and change your image

Open the Filmstrip Photoshop file in Photoshop and use Photoshop tools to affect the image. Remember not to damage the grey bar, unless you’ve rendered a "grey-bar" file to correct it. Of course, you can also paint with Photoshop if you want to keep away from the Vector Paint and Paint features of AE.

STEP 9: Finish out in AE

Remember to save your PSD as a copy only. Filmstrip format isn’t an available option from Photoshop alone. You must have the embedded After Effects reference pixels so that After Effects can decode it on its return.

YOUR GUIDE

Ko Maruyama
Freelance Animator
Los Angeles, CA

In addition to his contract animation work in Hollywood, Ko is a Pixel Corps senior artisan in the Particle Effects Team and teaches at the Art Center School of Design in Pasadena, California.

Ko Says Keep In Mind...

Although it used to be easy to copy your Photoshop filters into After Effects’ plug-ins folder and use them on animations, with the new versions of Photoshop filters and After Effects 6, it is no longer an effective solution. (Remember how you could share your Photoshop plug-ins with earlier versions of After Effects—4.x and before—but now can’t get those plug-ins to show up in After Effects?) Fortunately, After Effects 6.x maintains a few old tricks that work just fine. You can still work on your animations in Photoshop using the Filmstrip (.flm), Photoshop Sequence, or as a Photoshop Layered file (which is not covered here). To get your entire animation over to Photoshop, you must render it first in After Effects. Then you can use Photoshop’s filters or some of its other tools to create rotoscoped mattes, cel animations, or execute even more operations not yet available under After Effects 6.x.

Ko Maruyama
homepage.mac.com/komaruyama.com
a1413-1/2 W. Kenneth Road, #239
Glendale, CA 91201
komaruyama@mac.com




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