![]() ![]() The whole plug-in has been programmed to give results that quickly without sacrificing quality. And immediately, the paint-on effect was smaller. For example, when I wanted to resize the brush effect to a smaller area, I could quickly do that by just turning down the brush size and feathering. Having said that, I found the controls to be very intuitive and in support of very fast working. Still, I think you’ll get the best results if you apply PaintX effects on smaller surfaces and not on a third of the frame as I did. The rendering on my low-end iMac Retina 5K (27-inch, 2017) took a while but not much longer than it does without painting in Final Cut Pro X. I tested the plug-in by painting a large surface in a darker colour than the original. PaintX itself is presented in a full-scale window with playhead and, of course, full tracking controls. the thickness of a brush stroke or the saturation of a colour, but it may confuse users who also dabble around in Photoshop a bit at the beginning. The advantage of this approach is that you can change what you’ve done, e.g. The interface takes a bit of learning, not because it’s so complicated but because the tool you select gets an inspector that applies to the tool before you start using it and one that applies to the tool after you’ve worked with it. There are several actions you can take with PaintX, including paint and change colour, blur, smear, sharpen, warp, shrink and expand, clone, add noise, heal and erase. PaintX is a powerful Final Cut Pro X plug-in that lets you paint with tools like a brush on part of a frame and either on a few frames only or - by tracking motion - on all of your footage. ![]()
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