I guess that's my complaint. It would seem that implicit in asking for "fit to fill" one is asking to promote the motion adapter to a motion effect and to change the effect to the right speed to accomplish the fit to fill. Just seems like dopey programming not to just do it.
Looking for a tip here - Once one has edited the clip in, opened the motion effect window, promoted the effect, what's the fastest way to accomplish the "fit to fill" (other than guestimating and adjusting)?
D.
On Fri, Nov 22, 2013, at 02:13 PM, tcurren@aol.com wrote:
Until you "promote" the non native frame rate clip it is locked by Avid with the specific motion adapter they have chosen.
---In Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com, <danlist@...> wrote:
All knowing List,
Why is it that if one tries to do a "fit to fill" using media that is at
a non-native frame rate, the Avid rejects you with the message:
A motion control cannot be created from a clip with a non-native frame
rate. You must open a project matching this clip's frame rate to make a
motion control from it.
But if you edit the same clip into the same non-matching fps sequence
you can promote it to a Time Warp and change its speed?
Shouldn't the Avid be smart enough to figure out the "fit to fill"? It
is basically saying "Take these frames as indicated by the marks in the
source window and spread them between these two points in the sequence."
Is there something I'm missing here?
D.
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