In the world of anime editing, or "AMV" (Anime Music Video) culture, two things have achieved cult status over the last few years: the romantic slice-of-life anime Horimiya and the optical flow software Twixtor . Individually, they are impressive. But when you combine them, something magical happens.
If you are an editor, stop trying to slow-motion One Piece fights. Pick up Horimiya . Find the scene where Hori blushes. Run it through Twixtor. Ramp it down to 30%. horimiya twixtor clips better
Standard slow motion simply duplicates frames, resulting in choppy, stuttering video (usually 30fps slowed to 15fps). Twixtor, however, analyzes the movement of every pixel between two frames and creates new, intermediate frames. It invents motion. In the world of anime editing, or "AMV"
A: TikTok editors add a "Flow Flicker" effect (frame blending with opacity pulses) and heavy color grading (teal/orange split toning). Mimic the LUT used in Horimiya episode 12 for that golden-hour glow. If you are an editor, stop trying to