Thanks! It's actually pretty easy, and I'm thinking about creating a tutorial for it, but for now:
I use Open Canvas (http://www.portalgraphics.net/en/) - the old, original beta version. One of my favorite features of the software is that it records every 'brush stroke' so that you can replay it later. (The version I use is also so small that it fits on an old 1.44 floppy disk as a single file executable!)
Since other folks don't have Open Canvas I use a program called Bullent's Screen Recorder (http://download.cnet.com/Bulent-s-Screen-Recorder/3000-13633_4-10801640.html) to record the video
I pull the freshly recorded video into Windows Movie Maker, crop stuff that I don't want in there, add titles/credits, and lay down a track of my favorite music (with permission of course) and voila! Fun little video.
Hmmm... guess I just created that tutorial I was talking about.
I'll likely create a better one later, but that's the basics.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-09 10:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-09 03:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-09 04:00 pm (UTC)- I use Open Canvas (http://www.portalgraphics.net/en/) - the old, original beta version. One of my favorite features of the software is that it records every 'brush stroke' so that you can replay it later. (The version I use is also so small that it fits on an old 1.44 floppy disk as a single file executable!)
- Since other folks don't have Open Canvas I use a program called Bullent's Screen Recorder (http://download.cnet.com/Bulent-s-Screen-Recorder/3000-13633_4-10801640.html) to record the video
- I pull the freshly recorded video into Windows Movie Maker, crop stuff that I don't want in there, add titles/credits, and lay down a track of my favorite music (with permission of course) and voila! Fun little video.
Hmmm... guess I just created that tutorial I was talking about. I'll likely create a better one later, but that's the basics.no subject
Date: 2009-07-09 04:00 pm (UTC)