Christian Neil
Forum Replies Created
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Premiere has worked out well for me, but the last time that I edited a feature, I’d lose a lot of work each time that they pushed an update through.
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That worked, and I got a quicker response here than I did from the manufacturer. Thanks!
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That worked! Thanks so much for the help!
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That was easy….rendering now. Thanks, Tero!
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AVC/H.264
Supported Containers: .mp4, .mov
Profile: High
File Size: Unlimited
Recommended bitrate:
For 1080p: 50 Mbps
For 720p: 30 Mbps
For SD: 15 Mbps -
This was a very guerilla production with a DP shooting in 4k for the first time. Still no excuse for not lighting your scenes. though.
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I had some interesting results messing around with the Cineon effect. I don’t completely understand what all the controls mean, but when I moved the “internal white point” slider, it lightened things up significantly.
What I wound up doing was playing around with the order of the effects, and by setting brightness to 30, contrast to 10, and moving it on top of my color correction adjustments, it lightened them up without that dingy grey color. So it looks like slightly better crap.
Thanks for the quick replies!
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Christian Neil
January 17, 2008 at 3:37 am in reply to: Using motion tracking to fix shaky hand-held footageI finally figured out the problem…I was looking at the trackers, and not the comp. I just discovered the “apply” button, and now it’s working great. Thank you to all of you for the help on this. You guys rock!
This works much better than what I tried to do in desperation last night…I set up a couple of small solids at the desired tracking points as a reference, and tried to keyframe it manually…didn’t work so well.
I know that our computers need us for pretty much everything, but when it comes to our world, they can offer so much in return if only we can figure out how to talk to them 🙂
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Christian Neil
January 15, 2008 at 8:56 pm in reply to: Using motion tracking to fix shaky hand-held footageSo you’re saying this is an RTFM problem? *g* I’ve looked for the solution to this in the Meyers’ books, but couldn’t find it.
The reference points draw a path when I analyze, but the reference points are following the frame instead of the frame following the reference points.
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Christian Neil
January 15, 2008 at 8:00 pm in reply to: Using motion tracking to fix shaky hand-held footageI clicked the button that said “stabilize motion” in the effects controls, and it produced a tracking point that followed the actor, and clicking it again gave me another tracker, which followed a different point (I put one point on his head, and another one at his beltline). Both points follow the actor, but the video itself does not change.