Video is made up of a series of images, about 24 to 30 images per second of video. So sure - it would be a horribly senseless large waste of paper and ink - but yeah, it is possible.
To print the images, open the video in an video editing program like Adobe Premiere Pro, then export/render it as a frame sequence (png, jpg,tga). You can then open the images in a program like Photoshop and print them from there. Note that because there will be a ton of images, you may want to create a separate folder just for exporting the image files to.
depends on your frame rate (fps) and video quality. if you know the size of each frame then the answer in minutes is: 4Gb / [(size of each frame in Mb) * fps * 60 /1024]
YES
Get a software that can slow it down to that rate, or one that can pick individual frames and stop at each one.
You can't as the censor code is etched into the video code for each frame, so if you want to remove it, you must get the uncensored original video.
The Grandma Moses print will range in price from $10 to $15 each. The amount you can expect to get from the print will depend upon its condition and the frame that it is in.
Video files - since each 'frame' of video takes a lot of space to store the information.
Freeze- frame
You can't remove the watermark from the watermarked video as the watermark is embedded in each frame. You will need to keep the original, un-watermarked video.
A B-frame is a compressed video frame which is reconstructed based on its differences from the previous and the subsequent frame.
No. Print-screen is for taking photos, not capturing video.
There are different approaches that can be taken to framing a print. But whatever the approach used, the colors and style of both the frame and the matting will substantially affect how the print is perceived. We feel that the artwork should be framed for the enhancement of the art itself. To accomplish this in framing a print, select mat colors from the colors in the print itself. This tends to bring out the colors in the print and lead attention into the print, rather than distract from it. The same with the frame: Try to pick framing materials that repeat textures, patterns and other elements in the print itself. Framing elements that are totally different in appearance from the elements in the print tend to pull attention to the frame and off the art work; this you want to avoid. The end result should be pleasing to the eye, and contribute to—not distract from—the perception of the print itself. What about the environment? If the artwork itself is suitable to the environment, a frame designed as abo
A movie camera or a video camera takes many photographs every second, each photograph is known as a frame. Typical framing rates are 24 frames per second in film cameras, 25 fps or 30 fps in video cameras.