How to Get the Best Slow Motion Video | Optical Flow Tips
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- Опубліковано 9 вер 2020
- shutr.bz/3hcpcPq - Learn how to get the best slow motion footage while still shooting 24fps by using optical flow. Check out the blog post for more details on this method.
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#SlowMotion #EditingTips #DaVinciResolve #PremierePro - Фільми й анімація
Thanks for sharing slowmotion technic..
Great lesson! Thx! I luv Optical Flow.... much more than my Computer does ;)
Yes... haha. I have a pretty suped-up rig, and it struggled to edit this. I had to render out the individual optical flow files and bring them back in for a more responsive edit.
You ever go to UA-cam and just happen to randomly see on the home page the exact video you needed to finish a project?
Dude, it's 2020, just apply a frame interpolation algorithm like DAIN or RIFE. These things have been around for some years already, and now they're better than ever. Yet, I don't seem to find any videographers utilising these powerful tools, but instead fumble around with stock Adobe presets and complain that their camera doesn't have a shutter speed of one trillion.
Maybe because it's really inconvenient, needs a lot and power and I believe it's stuck at 1080p?
good
nice thanks for this tutorial i'm a contributor too
What do you think about Panasonic S5? Thanks
Hello friends I need a low budget stock photography tripod and the best stock photography lens low budget. i am using canon mark iv and 50mm lens 1.8 I plan the next lens buying...any idea friends please comments.
Hey Lewis my man. Premium Content as always. Feature film when?
Haha, let's get some more shorts on the UglyMcGregor page first!
It's worth saying it's not "either" high FPS or interpolation, but rather you can achieve significant results using both together. Getting your camera set to 60, or 120 fps if you have it gives you scope to slow down much further than the clean footage from the camera allows. Also I'd question the instruction to stick to 10 or 15% reduction. Reducing by factors of your frame rate is more of an issue, and in theory things shouldn't look MUCH worse down to 50% of your original frames, as you're just interpolating one frame between every two.
Annoyingly though, in a world where cameras tend to offer frame rates in multiples of 30, we then commonly display video in 25fps (especially outside the US)... which is not a simple factor of 30, or 60, or 120, which means your software is then interpolating irregular batches of frames, and leads to a less clean effect.
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