Stereomoviemaker is a nice little tool that will help you synchronize and pair your clips, however it is not a complete video editing software solution. It only works with one clip at a time.
Once you got your clips, you'll have to edit and cut your final video, for that you can use pretty much any video editing tool you want as long as :
1 - The software does not restrict your project resolution. You want dual 1080p, so make sure your editing software can deal with a video that is 3840x1080 (two videos side by side) or 1920x2160 (two videos over/under)
2 - you know how video editing and effects work (in 2D) and know how to use your software so that you don't ruin the 3D effect by your own mistake when using a special effect or a transition
There are also all-in-one solutions that are designed to help do everything but those are for professionals only and are extremely expensive.
Stereomoviemaker is a nice little tool that will help you synchronize and pair your clips, however it is not a complete video editing software solution. It only works with one clip at a time.
Once you got your clips, you'll have to edit and cut your final video, for that you can use pretty much any video editing tool you want as long as :
1 - The software does not restrict your project resolution. You want dual 1080p, so make sure your editing software can deal with a video that is 3840x1080 (two videos side by side) or 1920x2160 (two videos over/under)
2 - you know how video editing and effects work (in 2D) and know how to use your software so that you don't ruin the 3D effect by your own mistake when using a special effect or a transition
There are also all-in-one solutions that are designed to help do everything but those are for professionals only and are extremely expensive.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
So, if i understand well, there are no solutions not "extremly expensive" for 1080p.
=> But in 720p ?
stereomoviemaker seems to be for smalls resolutions, and my wish is to watch video on an LCD TV (3D Ready) (with a blueray disc).
If i understand well, Adobe After Effect is not a good choice because i have to make pic by pic (frame by frame) in alternance. Too long work !! I should want a film of 20 minutes minimum, or 60' max.
=> So, what is the solution ?? (maybe i haven't understand well your words, in this case , "sorry" ;-) )
[u]In my dream[/u] ;-) , even if Mac OS is not still ready for 3D view (120Hz LCD, Nvidia Drivers, ...), i hope to find a software to build these 3D films on MAC OS (and watch the result on a TV LCD "3D Ready"). (How many "GB" of DDR3 memory ? i don't know ... 8GB is ok ? more ?)
So, if i understand well, there are no solutions not "extremly expensive" for 1080p.
=> But in 720p ?
stereomoviemaker seems to be for smalls resolutions, and my wish is to watch video on an LCD TV (3D Ready) (with a blueray disc).
If i understand well, Adobe After Effect is not a good choice because i have to make pic by pic (frame by frame) in alternance. Too long work !! I should want a film of 20 minutes minimum, or 60' max.
=> So, what is the solution ?? (maybe i haven't understand well your words, in this case , "sorry" ;-) )
In my dream ;-) , even if Mac OS is not still ready for 3D view (120Hz LCD, Nvidia Drivers, ...), i hope to find a software to build these 3D films on MAC OS (and watch the result on a TV LCD "3D Ready"). (How many "GB" of DDR3 memory ? i don't know ... 8GB is ok ? more ?)
you can use almost any videoeditor, that support tracks.
place the videos, synronize them, and render to separate left-right file,
then use stereoscopic player to play on your 3d vision.
You can also use dualstream wmv format.
Technically speaking you can use any video editing software you want as long as it supports 1080p video and that you are familiar with traditional 2D video editing (you know how video editing works). But from a practical point of view it's better to have an advanced video editing software (Adobe Premiere pro, Sony Vegas, or if you are using a mac : Final Cut Pro) just in order to be sure you have enough flexibility inside the software to circumvent any limitation or bug that might occur.
For live 3D previewing when editing there are two possibilities :
-if the video editing software is 3D ready (natively or via a plug-in) and supports you display, then just use it.
-if the video editing software is not 3D ready, then you have to create your own preview on the timeline. You might not be able to get it working with every display but you can always easily make an anaglyph preview (red/blue glasses) with two video layers and simple colour fitlers on en entire layer, which you remove at the last minute when doing the final render.
Just a word on watching your videos on a BluRay 3D player and a standard 3DTV : you can forget about it. At the moment, software that create BluRay3D compatible video are preciously guarded by hollywod studios, they are just not available for anyone (or they are just outrageously expensive).
If you want to play your videos with full 2x1080p resolution you need a PC
If you want to use a stand alone BluRay player, you can do it but you have to use 1/2 horizontal resolution (960x1080 per eye), the good news is that you do not need a 3D enabled Blu Ray player, you can do this with a standard 2D BluRay player too.
Technically speaking you can use any video editing software you want as long as it supports 1080p video and that you are familiar with traditional 2D video editing (you know how video editing works). But from a practical point of view it's better to have an advanced video editing software (Adobe Premiere pro, Sony Vegas, or if you are using a mac : Final Cut Pro) just in order to be sure you have enough flexibility inside the software to circumvent any limitation or bug that might occur.
For live 3D previewing when editing there are two possibilities :
-if the video editing software is 3D ready (natively or via a plug-in) and supports you display, then just use it.
-if the video editing software is not 3D ready, then you have to create your own preview on the timeline. You might not be able to get it working with every display but you can always easily make an anaglyph preview (red/blue glasses) with two video layers and simple colour fitlers on en entire layer, which you remove at the last minute when doing the final render.
Just a word on watching your videos on a BluRay 3D player and a standard 3DTV : you can forget about it. At the moment, software that create BluRay3D compatible video are preciously guarded by hollywod studios, they are just not available for anyone (or they are just outrageously expensive).
If you want to play your videos with full 2x1080p resolution you need a PC
If you want to use a stand alone BluRay player, you can do it but you have to use 1/2 horizontal resolution (960x1080 per eye), the good news is that you do not need a 3D enabled Blu Ray player, you can do this with a standard 2D BluRay player too.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
Cineform has claimed that you can use 3D Vision with a nVidia Quadro card, Premiere Pro CS5 and Cineform Neo3D to get real-time monitoring of 3D on a Windows machine. The software is several thousand dollars, but still less than the turnkey manufacturers dominating the professional 3D filmmaking market. If anyone tries it out, please report back.
Cineform has claimed that you can use 3D Vision with a nVidia Quadro card, Premiere Pro CS5 and Cineform Neo3D to get real-time monitoring of 3D on a Windows machine. The software is several thousand dollars, but still less than the turnkey manufacturers dominating the professional 3D filmmaking market. If anyone tries it out, please report back.
(sorry for my bad english, i'm french ans i'll try to write well ...)
I have TWO cameras (exacly the same) and i want to fixed them together to have TWO films simultaneous.
(maybe 1080p, maybe 720p ..)
Then i'd like to find a software to mix these TWO films to make ONE 3D-film (then i will watch it with 3D vision glass and a 3D monitor).
Can you help me? Witch SOFTWARE ? (for Windows [u]AND[/u] for MAC OS X)
Thank you :-)
Stéphane
(sorry for my bad english, i'm french ans i'll try to write well ...)
I have TWO cameras (exacly the same) and i want to fixed them together to have TWO films simultaneous.
(maybe 1080p, maybe 720p ..)
Then i'd like to find a software to mix these TWO films to make ONE 3D-film (then i will watch it with 3D vision glass and a 3D monitor).
Can you help me? Witch SOFTWARE ? (for Windows AND for MAC OS X)
Thank you :-)
Stéphane
(sorry for my bad english, i'm french ans i'll try to write well ...)
I have TWO cameras (exacly the same) and i want to fixed them together to have TWO films simultaneous.
(maybe 1080p, maybe 720p ..)
Then i'd like to find a software to mix these TWO films to make ONE 3D-film (then i will watch it with 3D vision glass and a 3D monitor).
Can you help me? Witch SOFTWARE ? (for Windows [u]AND[/u] for MAC OS X)
Thank you :-)
Stéphane[/quote]
You can try Adobe AfterEffects to put the frames side by side.
(sorry for my bad english, i'm french ans i'll try to write well ...)
I have TWO cameras (exacly the same) and i want to fixed them together to have TWO films simultaneous.
(maybe 1080p, maybe 720p ..)
Then i'd like to find a software to mix these TWO films to make ONE 3D-film (then i will watch it with 3D vision glass and a 3D monitor).
Can you help me? Witch SOFTWARE ? (for Windows AND for MAC OS X)
Thank you :-)
Stéphane
You can try Adobe AfterEffects to put the frames side by side.
Mb: Asus P5W DH Deluxe
Cpu: C2D E6600
Gb: Nvidia 7900GT + 8800GTX
3D:100" passive projector polarized setup + 22" IZ3D
Stereodrivers: Iz3d & Tridef ignition and nvidia old school.
Once you got your clips, you'll have to edit and cut your final video, for that you can use pretty much any video editing tool you want as long as :
1 - The software does not restrict your project resolution. You want dual 1080p, so make sure your editing software can deal with a video that is 3840x1080 (two videos side by side) or 1920x2160 (two videos over/under)
2 - you know how video editing and effects work (in 2D) and know how to use your software so that you don't ruin the 3D effect by your own mistake when using a special effect or a transition
There are also all-in-one solutions that are designed to help do everything but those are for professionals only and are extremely expensive.
Once you got your clips, you'll have to edit and cut your final video, for that you can use pretty much any video editing tool you want as long as :
1 - The software does not restrict your project resolution. You want dual 1080p, so make sure your editing software can deal with a video that is 3840x1080 (two videos side by side) or 1920x2160 (two videos over/under)
2 - you know how video editing and effects work (in 2D) and know how to use your software so that you don't ruin the 3D effect by your own mistake when using a special effect or a transition
There are also all-in-one solutions that are designed to help do everything but those are for professionals only and are extremely expensive.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
=> But in 720p ?
stereomoviemaker seems to be for smalls resolutions, and my wish is to watch video on an LCD TV (3D Ready) (with a blueray disc).
If i understand well, Adobe After Effect is not a good choice because i have to make pic by pic (frame by frame) in alternance. Too long work !! I should want a film of 20 minutes minimum, or 60' max.
=> So, what is the solution ?? (maybe i haven't understand well your words, in this case , "sorry" ;-) )
[u]In my dream[/u] ;-) , even if Mac OS is not still ready for 3D view (120Hz LCD, Nvidia Drivers, ...), i hope to find a software to build these 3D films on MAC OS (and watch the result on a TV LCD "3D Ready"). (How many "GB" of DDR3 memory ? i don't know ... 8GB is ok ? more ?)
Thanks for your answers
=> But in 720p ?
stereomoviemaker seems to be for smalls resolutions, and my wish is to watch video on an LCD TV (3D Ready) (with a blueray disc).
If i understand well, Adobe After Effect is not a good choice because i have to make pic by pic (frame by frame) in alternance. Too long work !! I should want a film of 20 minutes minimum, or 60' max.
=> So, what is the solution ?? (maybe i haven't understand well your words, in this case , "sorry" ;-) )
In my dream ;-) , even if Mac OS is not still ready for 3D view (120Hz LCD, Nvidia Drivers, ...), i hope to find a software to build these 3D films on MAC OS (and watch the result on a TV LCD "3D Ready"). (How many "GB" of DDR3 memory ? i don't know ... 8GB is ok ? more ?)
Thanks for your answers
place the videos, synronize them, and render to separate left-right file,
then use stereoscopic player to play on your 3d vision.
You can also use dualstream wmv format.
place the videos, synronize them, and render to separate left-right file,
then use stereoscopic player to play on your 3d vision.
You can also use dualstream wmv format.
For live 3D previewing when editing there are two possibilities :
-if the video editing software is 3D ready (natively or via a plug-in) and supports you display, then just use it.
-if the video editing software is not 3D ready, then you have to create your own preview on the timeline. You might not be able to get it working with every display but you can always easily make an anaglyph preview (red/blue glasses) with two video layers and simple colour fitlers on en entire layer, which you remove at the last minute when doing the final render.
Just a word on watching your videos on a BluRay 3D player and a standard 3DTV : you can forget about it. At the moment, software that create BluRay3D compatible video are preciously guarded by hollywod studios, they are just not available for anyone (or they are just outrageously expensive).
If you want to play your videos with full 2x1080p resolution you need a PC
If you want to use a stand alone BluRay player, you can do it but you have to use 1/2 horizontal resolution (960x1080 per eye), the good news is that you do not need a 3D enabled Blu Ray player, you can do this with a standard 2D BluRay player too.
For live 3D previewing when editing there are two possibilities :
-if the video editing software is 3D ready (natively or via a plug-in) and supports you display, then just use it.
-if the video editing software is not 3D ready, then you have to create your own preview on the timeline. You might not be able to get it working with every display but you can always easily make an anaglyph preview (red/blue glasses) with two video layers and simple colour fitlers on en entire layer, which you remove at the last minute when doing the final render.
Just a word on watching your videos on a BluRay 3D player and a standard 3DTV : you can forget about it. At the moment, software that create BluRay3D compatible video are preciously guarded by hollywod studios, they are just not available for anyone (or they are just outrageously expensive).
If you want to play your videos with full 2x1080p resolution you need a PC
If you want to use a stand alone BluRay player, you can do it but you have to use 1/2 horizontal resolution (960x1080 per eye), the good news is that you do not need a 3D enabled Blu Ray player, you can do this with a standard 2D BluRay player too.
Passive 3D forever
110" DIY dual-projection system
2x Epson EH-TW3500 (1080p) + Linear Polarizers (SPAR)
XtremScreen Daylight 2.0
VNS Geobox501 signal converter
[url="http://medtron.org/make3d.aspx"]http://medtron.org/make3d.aspx[/url]
http://medtron.org/make3d.aspx