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Capria TV

by Frank Capria | Founder

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Nifty EPS Conversion Tool

Ever need to convert a puny JPEG or GIF of a client logo to EPS so you could scale it up? Adobe Illustrator’s Live Trace will do the job, but I don’t always have access to Illustrator on the client’s NLE. This handy web application does the trick quite nicely.

Update 2/27/08: Vector Magic has officially moved away from Stanford and is operating independently at vectormagic.com. It is no longer a free service, though the first two image conversions for new account holders are free.

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Motion Graphics • (1) Comments • Most recent comments by: Rob Birnholz, • Permalink

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Working Around QuickTime 7.4 Errors in After Effects

As noted nearly everywhere motion graphics artists congregate on the web, QuickTime 7.4 and After Effects don’t play nicely together. Apparently Apple’s movie rental DRM scheme is the culprit. Any QuickTime render from After Effects that requires more than 10 minutes will generate a permissions error.

There are two obvious options to address the issue:


  • Downgrade to QuickTime 7.3

  • Render an image sequence and then piece that sequence together in either QuickTime Pro or After Effects.

I’m not a huge fan of downgrading because you just never know if you’re going to break something in the process. If 7.4 is working for you aside from this pesky After Effects error, you might want to try this work around. It adds an extra step in After Effects, but it works. Follow these steps:



  1. When it comes time to render your After Effects composition, take that composition and nest it in another composition with the same settings by dragging the composition to the New Composition icon in the Project window.

  2. Select the original composition in the project window.

  3. Go to the Composition menu and select Pre-Render. The original composition has now been added to your Render Queue.

  4. In the Render Queue, edit the Output Module settings so that you are creating an image sequence. (I like .psd files for this because the file sizes are reasonable and the files are written quickly.)

  5. Now add the new sequence with the original sequence nested in it to your Render Queue. Set its Output Module to the desired QuickTime settings. Since this sequence will render in much less than 10 minutes, you should have no problem getting a valid QT movie out of After Effects without reverting to an earlier version of QuickTime.

This adds just a couple of minutes to your total render time, and you can leave After Effects to do its thing with a long render without having to manually piece the image sequence together in QuickTime Pro.

Motion Graphics • (1) Comments • Most recent comments by: glennser, • Permalink

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Capria TV by Frank Capria | Founder

Frank CapriaFrank Capria was an editor and post production director at WGBH in Boston for 15 years, receiving credits on series such as American Experience, NOVA, and FRONTLINE. He's also worked on several independent documentaries, most notably Eyes on the Prize.

Since 2000 Frank has pursued more entrepreneurial endeavors working as a business consultant, and founding his own consulting and design firm, Kingpin Interactive, and Xprove.com - an online project management and file sharing service for video professionals.

A frequent contributor to DV Magazine and blogger, Frank's beat includes editing and all things post production, and evolving business trends in the media and entertainment industries.