2018-03-09, 07:38 PM
Hi.
I have a short (40 seconds) animated clip which has been subjected by image stabilization (probably Youtube's), which has failed miserably. The image rotates and zooms in and out and is generally horrible to look at.
The clip is available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1VlH4...jl0RGFGLWc
I already have the background in good quality, so my hope is that it's possible to recreate the camera movements on the background, and copy the foreground element onto it. But first I need to undo the movement created by the attempted image stabilization.
There's a huge channel logo in the picture, and I do have a black frame where the full logo is positioned exactly where it's supposed to be. Is it possible to do a new image stabilization that focuses only on the logo, and moves, rotates and zooms every frame, so that the logo fits properly?
I only need the last 23 seconds of the clip, and it's mostly animated at 12fps, so it's probably less than 300 frames. I'm fine with manual labor too. If there's a tool that easily lets me move the frame along all three axes, and rotate it, using only the keyboard, I could probably make something that's "good enough" for my use.
I have a short (40 seconds) animated clip which has been subjected by image stabilization (probably Youtube's), which has failed miserably. The image rotates and zooms in and out and is generally horrible to look at.
The clip is available here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1VlH4...jl0RGFGLWc
I already have the background in good quality, so my hope is that it's possible to recreate the camera movements on the background, and copy the foreground element onto it. But first I need to undo the movement created by the attempted image stabilization.
There's a huge channel logo in the picture, and I do have a black frame where the full logo is positioned exactly where it's supposed to be. Is it possible to do a new image stabilization that focuses only on the logo, and moves, rotates and zooms every frame, so that the logo fits properly?
I only need the last 23 seconds of the clip, and it's mostly animated at 12fps, so it's probably less than 300 frames. I'm fine with manual labor too. If there's a tool that easily lets me move the frame along all three axes, and rotate it, using only the keyboard, I could probably make something that's "good enough" for my use.