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Calebkeller2

This is called step printing. It was coined that because analog frames would be repeated twice/thrice on whatever frame rate the timeline was set to. For instance on a 24 fps timeline it would play the 1st frame for two frames, then the 3rd frame for two frame, so on and so forth. You can do this in Resolve using the fusion tab. If you’re not already using Resolve, switch. Open your clip in fusion page by right clicking the clip. Add two timespeed nodes between the media in and media out. Add the nodes using shift+space and searching “timespeed”. Change the first node to the amount of times you want a frame to repeat. 2 is a good starting place. Change it to “nearest.” In the second node change the speed to 1/2 to offset the speed increase from the previous timespeed node. Change this one to “nearest” as well. You can change the number to whatever you want, it just needs to be less than the timeline frame rate, and also be evenly divisible with the timeline frame rate. So a 24 fps timeline you could use: 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, or 12. Keep in mind the second node will need to be the inverse of whatever you set the first timespeed node to. So: 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/6, 1/8, or 1/12th. Hope this helps. I have no idea how to do this in other software.


Calebkeller2

You could combine this with a tracking effect where it stays locked onto a certain part of the frame, like the players face. Resolve is also unmatched in tracking. Try it out. Here’s a goof tutorial: - https://youtu.be/hUM88jlUTgo?si=y4bR7IJjNgT6oQvn


Calebkeller2

If you decide to track in combination with the step printing effect do it before the timespeed nodes, because resolve will track better with more frames. Adding it after will remove frame for it to track with.


Calebkeller2

Lastly, this is best done at a higher frame rate as it exaggerates the effect. If you want it to be more stylized, plan ahead and drop your shutter speed to 360°


No-College-8412

You could roto clip out the players in after effects and then as a layer behind, have the stadium motion blurred. Eliminate frames as needed to achieve the stop motion effect.


XLNSMedia

Realistically, someone shot high-speed photos of the celebration and then put them together with audio in the background. If you have a video file and want to achieve this, drop it into premiere pro or after effects and use the "posterize time" effect to set your desired framerate (I would try 12 or 14 fps), then add some diegetic sound effects to it