Scrambling: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "Category:Techniques '''Scrambling''' is a technique similar to Stuttering that involves taking a short video sequence, cutting it up into 1-2 frame chunks, then scrambling its order." |
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'''Scrambling''' is a technique similar to [[Stuttering]] that involves taking a short video sequence, cutting it up into 1-2 frame chunks, then scrambling its order. | '''Scrambling''' is a technique similar to [[Stuttering]] that involves taking a short video sequence, cutting it up into 1-2 frame chunks, then scrambling its order. | ||
=How-To= | |||
# Take the piece of footage you want to scramble. Try to keep it a bit shorter, because remember, you have to work with every single frame individually! It comes down to your patience. | |||
# Cut the footage into as small pieces as possible (1-2 frames). The shorter, the more effective. Avoid sub-frame scrambles as information will be lost! | |||
# Now, the tedious part - grab a random frame and move it to a new spot on the timeline. Then, grab another random one (pick one that's far away from the first one.) Then do it again and again until you run out of frames. You should now have a scrambled video! | |||
=Examples= | |||
Latest revision as of 19:13, 2 August 2024
Scrambling is a technique similar to Stuttering that involves taking a short video sequence, cutting it up into 1-2 frame chunks, then scrambling its order.
How-To
- Take the piece of footage you want to scramble. Try to keep it a bit shorter, because remember, you have to work with every single frame individually! It comes down to your patience.
- Cut the footage into as small pieces as possible (1-2 frames). The shorter, the more effective. Avoid sub-frame scrambles as information will be lost!
- Now, the tedious part - grab a random frame and move it to a new spot on the timeline. Then, grab another random one (pick one that's far away from the first one.) Then do it again and again until you run out of frames. You should now have a scrambled video!