Before Graeme Nattress started at RED he was very well known for making exceptional plug-ins for Final Cut Pro. To celebrate his interview in the Digital Producer Magazine, Graeme currently makes his Bleach Bypass filter available for free. You can read the whole article to find the link, or click here. Installations instructions are on page two of the interview.
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It is easy to lose track as to which version of Final Cut should go with the plethora of Quicktime and Mac OS versions. But help is at hand.
Jon Chapell at the Digital Rebellion has put together a nice recommendation of which Final Cut Studio/Final Cut Pro versions go best with which QT and Mac OS versions:
Final Cut Pro Version Mac OS Version QuickTime Version 6.0.3 10.4.11 / 10.5.2 7.4.5 6.0.2 10.4.11 / 10.5.1 7.3.1 5.1.4 10.4.9 7.1.6 5.0.4 10.4.9 7.1.6 4.5 10.3.9 6.5 3.0.4 10.2.8 Update 2 6.2 3.0 10.2.8 Update 2 5.0.6 2.0.2 9.2.2 5.0.1 1.2.5 9.2.2 4.1.3 1.2.1 8.6 4.1.1 1.0.1 8.6 4.0.3 1.0 8.6 4b16
Sometimes you have to produce photographs from films, so-called frame grabs. In Final Cut Pro this entails several clicks for each frame, something that becomes tiresome after a while. Also, if your material is anamorphic, you have to resize it in a separate programme, adding yet more clicks.Enter Movie Frame Grabber, a simple programme for the Mac.You drag a QT into the blue window, then you chose the frame you want, hit “Save Frame” and you are done.Much easier than using QT or FCP.One thing I noticed – and I am torn between calling it a feature or a bug – is that each frame gets exported in the same size as your windows is sized. I.E. When you have a 600×400 QT file, but your window is, say 605×605, you get a square picture. The good thing is that Movie Frame Grabber does a decent job of uprezzing. So if you need some quick framegrabs, this is a big time saver.
Wishes
What I would love are the following future features:
- De-interlacing
- Automatic naming and numbering of exported frames.
- Option to export in native QT size (with option of having 16:9). Option of having 25%, 50%, 200%, 400% sizes. Throw in some advanced resizing calculations, and this could become a powerful tool that people would spend money on. This reviewer included.
- Display of current window size.
- A Text saying “Drop QT file here” instead of the blue screen — this threw me off at first; blue screen to me suggested that I would have to plug in a DV source.
- Support for keyboard control. Space = start/stop. Arrow left/right = one frame advance/back.
That said, great little – and free – program.(Review at Macupdate.)




