Matija Petrovic
August 24th, 2011, 08:06 AM
Hello to all,
I just started to make some picture stabilization with new warp stabilizer but when I export video, quality of it is not the best. I try export in all formats but results is the same. Is this because stabilizer or am I doing something wrong. My original footage is in mpeg-2 and I import that footage direct in ae.
here is video that You know what I'm talking about
proba - YouTube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pp2-Q_zUPjg)
thanks for replies
Murray Christian
August 24th, 2011, 07:16 PM
It's hard to see a serious problem from that example. I may be looking in the wrong place. What do you find wrong with it?
Remember that a stabiliser (most of them, I'm pretty sure, anyway) have to expand the footage to fill the frame after stabilising. You've given it a pretty hard job with backwards hand held footage, I think. What you're seeing probably how much it has to expand to adjust it properly making focus a bit softer and noise more obvious and things.
Doesn't look too bad though, I thought.
Matija Petrovic
August 25th, 2011, 04:28 AM
try to watch video in 720p and you will see difference between first video (before warp stabilizer) and after
Murray Christian
August 25th, 2011, 11:37 AM
I watched it in 720. It looks different but not very bad. It looks like I would expect after a stabiliser. If it is a problem you should adjust the options to make it stabilise less or differently, I think.
Some others probably know more than me, though.
Shawn McCalip
August 25th, 2011, 06:34 PM
Are you talking about the warping and "rippling" of the image when you pass through door frames and whenever something new comes into the foreground? To get rid of that, you'll need to change your Stabilization Method option to something other than Subspace Warp. Try something such as "Position, Scale, Rotation" instead. Also, try manipulating some of the different settings and see what you come back with.
The warp stabilizer does a pretty good job, but you need to help it along to get better results.
David Barnett
August 27th, 2011, 10:16 AM
Are you talking about the warping and "rippling" of the image when you pass through door frames and whenever something new comes into the foreground? To get rid of that, you'll need to change your Stabilization Method option to something other than Subspace Warp. Try something such as "Position, Scale, Rotation" instead. Also, try manipulating some of the different settings and see what you come back with.
The warp stabilizer does a pretty good job, but you need to help it along to get better results.
I think she's talking about the quality of the video, not the steadiness.
Martija, what are you exporting the footage to? Try using AVI or H.264 if you can. And check your compression settings, try using lossless or something very uncompressed.
Matija Petrovic
August 29th, 2011, 02:48 AM
hy,
first I'm male :)
I export footage in different formats (in that was h.264 and avi) but quality of video was same
Jim Andrada
August 30th, 2011, 10:11 PM
Looks OK to me - not that I was paying much attention to the stabilization. I think it proves that if your subject is good enough nobody will complain about slight technical deficiencies.
Seriously, I think it's pretty much what I would expect after stabilizing.and better than some of the handheld stuff I've seen.