I like that you have the KNOWLEDGE and are flexible enough to BEND the rules when able to. Plus it works out better for us less equipped and less knowing :-)
This is the best hyperlaspe tutorial I've watched so far. And the best part is that you've included so many examples of 'what went wrong due to what'. That's really helpful. Cheers!
This video got my into hyperlapsing almost a couple years ago. It's now one of my favorite shots to get and I love it. Thank you so much for the work you put into this video and the other stabilization vids - so helpful
OMFG finally the best video I was looking for. Other people said tripod is a must but I never really got it why when you can simply do it hand held and you just proved my point, great ! You rock ! God Bless you !
cheers on the video! Thank you! I just attempted my first hyperlapse yesterday and it came out alright! I'llbe knocking out a video on it soon and def will reference this video for tips! Wish I couldve seen this before I tried haha but lessons learned from yesterdays are what you touched on in the beginning regarding the tripod. I believe I spent a fair amount of time trying to adjust my tripod when I could have just handheld it (mid afternoon clear Texas skies) and achieved the same in much less the time.
This is fantastic. I've gotten really comfortable with timelapses on my DSLR but have yet to try a hyperlapse, mainly because of all the reasons you mentioned in the beginning - everyone makes it out to be much more complicated than it really needs to be. Will try my first hyperlapse soon thanks to this :)
Here's how I understand from TH-cam videos on how to make a hyperlapse. First, you need all your gear and software. Meaning, a camera(DSLR), a tripod(optional), a interval(optional), a good lens(18-50), a filter for night and that's your gear. For software, you will need LR(LightRoom) and AFx(After Affects), then a editing software. You will need to have an interval timer set weather that be on your camera or an actual interval. Depending on the feet you will set it per seconds. Then keep on of your FP on a object that will work for your setting. Track the object and take about 150 frames or something around there for about 4 seconds depending on distance and how fast you're moving. Lot of work but they turn out AMAZING! I love them so much and just love the idea and concept that goes into it. Thanks again for this video, really helps and I like the idea that you don't need a tripod. I don't like them very much.
When you told me you don't use the tripod you got my whole attention to this video. I've tried it a couple of times with it and it just made harder for me to shoot! Great video, thank you!
+cameratest I use a tripod as a monopod - this makes it more stable than hand held and quicker to line up. (I've also used this down the beach it it works out pretty good) I use an intervelometer, and put it in my pocket while shooting, then use the Adobe products to edit it
How long do you set your intervalometer for? When I used an intervalometer, I found I was rushing to set up the shot and then standing around waiting for the shutter to click. Occasionally I wouldn't be set up in time and the shot would be ruined. An intervalometer would definitely help avoid some issues in the final product though, like clouds that make erratic jumps. Using a monopod is a good idea, thanks for the tip!
The monopod/intervalometer combination seems helpful because holding the camera up trying to keep it aligned while you're waiting for the shutter to click gets pretty tiring. I'll have to try your method next time I shoot a hyperlapse.
Great tutorial. Only thing I'd add about having a tripod...you can set the shutter speed to a much longer interval, therefore you get motion blur from the people within frame but a completely sharp environment. This can look amazing with cars or crowds of people that flow like water, whereas having completely sharp people in your shots can look a bit jittery. My 2 cents :)
I guess I never thought about it before, but unless you need the people in a hyperlapse to be blurry (ergo you're using a long shutter speed) it does make a lot of sense to do it handheld. Nice tutorial!
never heard before of hyperlapse. your video explains it very good and easy! Will try to use it in my next aftermovie. many thanks for making this video.
It seems like every hyperlapse would be shaky/jittery doing it this way, but your work proves otherwise. Interesting and good job! I'm just gettting into this...
Nice work. Great tutorial. Lumix Gh5 has a super timelapse app that builds 4k internal clips in minutes with intervalometor saving hours in post. The stop animation mode overlays last image over present to help with alignment. If only it had full frame sensor...
Ok, after watching this I did a test. I filmed the same thing with tripod and handheld. Handheld was much easier AND looked much better with less effort. The only drawback is it can't be done with slow shutter/ND filters to blur moving objects. But this is a great minimalist technique that looks amazing. So much easier than setting up motion control devices and dealing with all the extra gear. Thanks for the tips.
The informations given here are really good. Thanks for it. I watched another video a day ago where the photographer was using a Monopod with legs for the hyper lapse. That seemed to be good too. At least way better than the tripod option. I gotta try a hyperlapse video myself.
I´ve saw a lot of tutorials over a thousand views, trying to improve my hyperlapses and have them smoothness. This tutorial is AWESOME, as the tutorial of how to stabilize in after effects but for me a little bit complicated,I have to checked that video more times doing at the same time in after effects while watching. By the way I think that If you make your timelapses with a monopod It would be better than a tripod and better than hand held,is a suggestion :) . I suscribed, I´ve found your tutorials very good for me, is an inspiration,now I can do great hyperlapses. I´ll make your advices and show you my next timelapse movie. THANKS A LOT MAN! Keep on working and timelapsing,nice job!(Im not used to give comments but you deserve to know my whole opinion about this unknown jewel tutorial. Cheers.
Truly an awesome video. Thank you for speaking plainly to us novices! You bring up a punch of great points. Can I ask what your post processing is? LRTimelapse? Btw, you’re really well travelled.
This is one of the best and most practical tutorial of hyperlapse for beginners, congrats. Btw, do you use Final Cut or After Effect to do the post-stabilization? Happy Christmas.
Fantastic! Just did my first attempt of a hyperlapse in Minsk. It turned out not good. I shot 24mm and after stabilizing its wobbly as you say. You think shooting at 35 is better to avoid this? Going again tomorrow if the cloud situation is cool :) Thanks for making this vid. Really helpful!
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Great tutorial. Any chance you do a tutorial for hyperlapse when you move around an object in a circle ? Like you did for the Diver City Tokyo or Chion-in, Kyoto. I guess the technique is a little different ? I mean do you still move the same distance between shots all the time ? And how do you keep the same distance away from your subject ? any tips ? thanks
great video I walk around with my nikon d7200 in time lapse mode don't no if it's the same but it looks good thanks for the tutorial going to give it a go
You... right now... to me... are legend! To put it in context, I have been shooting on tripod for the past 6 or 7 sequences. It did my head in! I knew handheld would be better, but because TH-cam didn't tell me that was correct, I have suffered. Edti: I am doing a crowd hyperlapse at an event tomorrow and I almost gave up on the idea because of the tripod until I just literally found this video. Any tips for getting crowds - shutter speed, movement? Anyways, ill finish the video now, at 1 minute mark but had to comment. God bless you sir.
Hello. Thanks for the video. I'm a beginner photographer an this is really helpful, because I want to get into timelapses and hyperlapses. What's your favorite lens for making those?
I've been watching your videos on hyper lapses and they are a great resource for one I'm about to produce. However I have a question: how would you stabilize a sequence that is shot moving forward, especially when there's no static point such as a main building or monument in the middle of the frame? For example the shot at 6:16 is what I'm having issues on planning to stabilize for my project.
+cameratest really loved ur video and advanced stabilizing in AE....thanks a lot for that...i tried to some hyperlapse and tried to stabilize in AE... Not really a satisfactory result....wanna ask you onething that, did you really crop all your hyperlapse depends on the frame aftr AE stabilization....?.... I wonder by seeing that corridor shots....did you crop that video..?
Hi, great work! Question: While you were shooting in Venice on the boat your Focuspoint gets out of View multiple times. How did you handle this problem? What kind of method did do you use in such cases to get a steady imagerow? thanks a lot!
What a great tutorial. One question, I've seen my HL videos (including yours) that zoom in and out off the subject point In a very cool way. Sometimes even changing altitude simultaneously. Is that just a case of taking zoom in/out clicks within the same trail of shots? Or is it something more 'technichal'
Great video. One of the end scenes shows you sailing through Venice. However, there's doesn't seem to be a constant focal point like you described at the beginning, because you turn a corner. Is this achieved by aligning a second focal point. If I've viewed this wrong, please let me know.
That one was tough to shoot and difficult to stabilize. I just tried to look down the canal at some point in the distance and use it as a focal point temporarily, then shift the point gradually as I could see further down the canal. I just sort of winged it. I had to stabilize it in many stages with different sets of tracking points. If you try to shoot that kind of hyperlapse, you might find it is difficult or impossible to stabilize.
What lens would you recommend to use every time? I have a 18-50mm but also a 50mm prime, are 50mm prime lenses just as good providing you get the composition the same? (If there's enough space etc)
A 50mm prime would typically be sharper than a zoom lens at 50mm, so that would be a good choice vs. using the 18-50 all the way zoomed in. If you're shooting on a sensor with a 1.5 or 1.6 crop ratio, then anything 30mm or longer is probably pretty safe. I shoot wider than that sometimes if I can't get a good composition with a lens that long and if you're careful to align the images precisely while shooting it can sometimes work well.
I just learned that Adobe Premiere Pro has warp stabilizer in it. What is the process of bringing all my images into Premiere so I could apply the stabilizer to the images? Do I need to create an image sequence? Also you may have stated this in the video but I noticed some of your clips were faster or slower than others. If you know you want a particular shot to be fast like your shot of the National Mall how do you decide how many steps to take between shots? Same question if you want your shot to be slower. Lastly, how long are you shooting at each location? Thanks!
Thanks for the video. Lots of good info. Please watch some TH-cam videos on normalizing audio in videos. Your music is way too loud compared to the speech parts. It is a pain to have to adjust the audio volume all during the video.
Since I usually don't use an intervalometer, the time varies a little bit from shot to shot but typically about 3-5 seconds. On a boat sometimes I use an intervalometer and I'd typically set it to 2 seconds. It depends on how fast the boat is going and how far away my subject is.
its all relative to your surroundings and situation. if everything around you is fast (i.e. clouds,people movement, car movement, ect.) you want to try to shoot something maybe a little more faster just to have things a little more smooth and looking better. if the area is calm and not much movement you have more of a window between your shots. It all comes down to experience. Shoot a few (yah they are time consuming) and learn as you go.
I like that you have the KNOWLEDGE and are flexible enough to BEND the rules when able to.
Plus it works out better for us less equipped and less knowing :-)
This is by far the best tutorial on how to make a hyperlapse
Love this simpler take on hyperlapses, not using tripod and intervalometer, yet the results are great. thanks for the tips.
This is the best hyperlaspe tutorial I've watched so far. And the best part is that you've included so many examples of 'what went wrong due to what'. That's really helpful. Cheers!
This video got my into hyperlapsing almost a couple years ago. It's now one of my favorite shots to get and I love it. Thank you so much for the work you put into this video and the other stabilization vids - so helpful
This is easily the best Hyperlapse video I've seen yet. Nailed it and had the examples to back up your points.
this is literally the best tutorial for hyperlapse creation, carrying a bulky tripod is practically useless man for daylight shots.. subscribed!
OMFG finally the best video I was looking for. Other people said tripod is a must but I never really got it why when you can simply do it hand held and you just proved my point, great ! You rock ! God Bless you !
cheers on the video! Thank you! I just attempted my first hyperlapse yesterday and it came out alright! I'llbe knocking out a video on it soon and def will reference this video for tips! Wish I couldve seen this before I tried haha but lessons learned from yesterdays are what you touched on in the beginning regarding the tripod. I believe I spent a fair amount of time trying to adjust my tripod when I could have just handheld it (mid afternoon clear Texas skies) and achieved the same in much less the time.
This is definitely by far the easiest way to hyperlapse. Thanks man!
This is the best hyperlapse tutorial I have seen so far. Cannot really imagine myself taking photos with a tripod! Woudl take ages! :-))) Thank you!
this has got to be the most practical hyperlapse tutorial that I've found on youtube! thanks!
this was easily one of the best tutorial i have ever watched on anything, thanks a lot
This is fantastic. I've gotten really comfortable with timelapses on my DSLR but have yet to try a hyperlapse, mainly because of all the reasons you mentioned in the beginning - everyone makes it out to be much more complicated than it really needs to be. Will try my first hyperlapse soon thanks to this :)
Here's how I understand from TH-cam videos on how to make a hyperlapse. First, you need all your gear and software. Meaning, a camera(DSLR), a tripod(optional), a interval(optional), a good lens(18-50), a filter for night and that's your gear. For software, you will need LR(LightRoom) and AFx(After Affects), then a editing software. You will need to have an interval timer set weather that be on your camera or an actual interval. Depending on the feet you will set it per seconds. Then keep on of your FP on a object that will work for your setting. Track the object and take about 150 frames or something around there for about 4 seconds depending on distance and how fast you're moving. Lot of work but they turn out AMAZING! I love them so much and just love the idea and concept that goes into it. Thanks again for this video, really helps and I like the idea that you don't need a tripod. I don't like them very much.
One of the best tutorials I've ever seen! Thank you so much. Awesome work
When you told me you don't use the tripod you got my whole attention to this video. I've tried it a couple of times with it and it just made harder for me to shoot! Great video, thank you!
Ee9ee
Good tips here.
Have a look at the hyper lapse I did yesterday if you have a minute. I tried using a mountainboard as the dolly. Came out ok.
I shoot hyperlapses regularly now and stuff like this is still helpful, thank you
Great! Do you do anything different than me that you think works better? Or any tips you have that I didn't mention?
+cameratest I use a tripod as a monopod - this makes it more stable than hand held and quicker to line up. (I've also used this down the beach it it works out pretty good) I use an intervelometer, and put it in my pocket while shooting, then use the Adobe products to edit it
How long do you set your intervalometer for? When I used an intervalometer, I found I was rushing to set up the shot and then standing around waiting for the shutter to click. Occasionally I wouldn't be set up in time and the shot would be ruined. An intervalometer would definitely help avoid some issues in the final product though, like clouds that make erratic jumps. Using a monopod is a good idea, thanks for the tip!
+cameratest I find that a 5 second gap is enough for me as the monopod allows me to tilt it really quickly to line up
The monopod/intervalometer combination seems helpful because holding the camera up trying to keep it aligned while you're waiting for the shutter to click gets pretty tiring. I'll have to try your method next time I shoot a hyperlapse.
Best tutorial on this subject so far.
Great tutorial. Only thing I'd add about having a tripod...you can set the shutter speed to a much longer interval, therefore you get motion blur from the people within frame but a completely sharp environment. This can look amazing with cars or crowds of people that flow like water, whereas having completely sharp people in your shots can look a bit jittery. My 2 cents :)
Super useful tutorial! Especially the warning about using a fish-eye lens.
Thank you for saving my life and escaping the tripod addiction.
This is great man! You make it a lot easier than I think it would be!
Awesome tips! Thanks! Can't wait to go re-try it after my failed previous attempts at hyper lapses
Thank you so much! From your video I finally understood how to know the lenght of hyperlapse beforehand,
I guess I never thought about it before, but unless you need the people in a hyperlapse to be blurry (ergo you're using a long shutter speed) it does make a lot of sense to do it handheld. Nice tutorial!
Thanks for the video... the best hyper-lapse vid tutorial I have seen till now!👍
Thanks. Best hyperlapse tutorial on TH-cam
never heard before of hyperlapse. your video explains it very good and easy! Will try to use it in my next aftermovie. many thanks for making this video.
It seems like every hyperlapse would be shaky/jittery doing it this way, but your work proves otherwise. Interesting and good job! I'm just gettting into this...
You're the man!
Thank you for sharing and spreading creativity.
Wow this was SUPER helpful! I'm gonna go shoot a hyper lapse this weekend!
Love this! Nice job. I 100% agree that you don't need to make this as complicated as people make it seem. :)
best tips on YT fo hyperlapses I saw. thanks for your Videos!
Nice work. Great tutorial.
Lumix Gh5 has a super timelapse app that builds 4k internal clips in minutes with intervalometor saving hours in post. The stop animation mode overlays last image over present to help with alignment. If only it had full frame sensor...
Ok, after watching this I did a test. I filmed the same thing with tripod and handheld. Handheld was much easier AND looked much better with less effort. The only drawback is it can't be done with slow shutter/ND filters to blur moving objects.
But this is a great minimalist technique that looks amazing. So much easier than setting up motion control devices and dealing with all the extra gear.
Thanks for the tips.
The informations given here are really good. Thanks for it.
I watched another video a day ago where the photographer was using a Monopod with legs for the hyper lapse.
That seemed to be good too. At least way better than the tripod option.
I gotta try a hyperlapse video myself.
I´ve saw a lot of tutorials over a thousand views, trying to improve my hyperlapses and have them smoothness. This tutorial is AWESOME, as the tutorial of how to stabilize in after effects but for me a little bit complicated,I have to checked that video more times doing at the same time in after effects while watching. By the way I think that If you make your timelapses with a monopod It would be better than a tripod and better than hand held,is a suggestion :) . I suscribed, I´ve found your tutorials very good for me, is an inspiration,now I can do great hyperlapses. I´ll make your advices and show you my next timelapse movie. THANKS A LOT MAN! Keep on working and timelapsing,nice job!(Im not used to give comments but you deserve to know my whole opinion about this unknown jewel tutorial. Cheers.
This is such an awesome vid. Thanks for all the tips. I will definitely be stepping up my vids with my upcoming trip to Morocco. Thanks again.
Thanks for this tutorial. Really Helpful. How about shooting at Aperture priority mode?
Great video that was fun and informative. You made hyperlapse less intimidating to shoot.
Truly an awesome video. Thank you for speaking plainly to us novices! You bring up a punch of great points. Can I ask what your post processing is? LRTimelapse? Btw, you’re really well travelled.
This is one of the best and most practical tutorial of hyperlapse for beginners, congrats.
Btw, do you use Final Cut or After Effect to do the post-stabilization? Happy Christmas.
Awesome tips, especially the hyper lapse on the boat. Thanks. Subbed !!
Wow! Didnt know it was this easy!!!!!! Very good tutorial!!! Thank you so much!
it is a very simple methods to do hyperlapse. thanks a lot for sharing
Great tutorial. I am using a monopod when I want longer exposure time.
Very practical! My style. Thank you for this!
Love the video, especially because you shot it in my home town!
Fantastic! Just did my first attempt of a hyperlapse in Minsk. It turned out not good. I shot 24mm and after stabilizing its wobbly as you say. You think shooting at 35 is better to avoid this? Going again tomorrow if the cloud situation is cool :) Thanks for making this vid. Really helpful!
Awesome video; great tips and beautiful timelapses. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience.
THAT what we call a TUTO !!
THANK YOU VERY MUCH !
Best tutorial so far
Mezmerizing.. wow.. brilliant thinking! thankyou for such a brilliant tutorial : )
Great video! Thanks so much for posting. I'm going to work on this today to see what I can get. I wish I could give the vid more thumbs up.
This video is simply amazing!!!
Greetings from Chile :)
Good info here that I haven't heard anywhere else.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Great tutorial.
Any chance you do a tutorial for hyperlapse when you move around an object in a circle ? Like you did for the Diver City Tokyo or Chion-in, Kyoto. I guess the technique is a little different ?
I mean do you still move the same distance between shots all the time ? And how do you keep the same distance away from your subject ? any tips ?
thanks
great video I walk around with my nikon d7200 in time lapse mode don't no if it's the same but it looks good thanks for the tutorial going to give it a go
Thankyou! so simply put for anyone to understand aweome job
Great tutorial, you deserve more subs!
You... right now... to me... are legend!
To put it in context, I have been shooting on tripod for the past 6 or 7 sequences. It did my head in! I knew handheld would be better, but because TH-cam didn't tell me that was correct, I have suffered.
Edti: I am doing a crowd hyperlapse at an event tomorrow and I almost gave up on the idea because of the tripod until I just literally found this video. Any tips for getting crowds - shutter speed, movement?
Anyways, ill finish the video now, at 1 minute mark but had to comment.
God bless you sir.
+Zimema Mhone Actually, you answer all questions in the video. Thanks again.
THIS SHOWS ME HOW IM ABLE TO UNDERSTAND
VERY NICE I SUBSCRIBED
Hello. Thanks for the video. I'm a beginner photographer an this is really helpful, because I want to get into timelapses and hyperlapses. What's your favorite lens for making those?
I've been watching your videos on hyper lapses and they are a great resource for one I'm about to produce. However I have a question: how would you stabilize a sequence that is shot moving forward, especially when there's no static point such as a main building or monument in the middle of the frame? For example the shot at 6:16 is what I'm having issues on planning to stabilize for my project.
Awesome tutorial man! This is gonna come in handy for me one day
Wow thanks, just got a camera and I find this amazing and beautiful
Will test and maybe even come back with results
Thank you so much😍
That's easy to follow!
Great tutorial!
+cameratest really loved ur video and advanced stabilizing in AE....thanks a lot for that...i tried to some hyperlapse and tried to stabilize in AE... Not really a satisfactory result....wanna ask you onething that, did you really crop all your hyperlapse depends on the frame aftr AE stabilization....?....
I wonder by seeing that corridor shots....did you crop that video..?
Hi, great work! Question: While you were shooting in Venice on the boat your Focuspoint gets out of View multiple times. How did you handle this problem? What kind of method did do you use in such cases to get a steady imagerow? thanks a lot!
thanks for taking the time to make this, great tutorial.
hi great work well done . about the footage u couldnt stablize can i try ? can i use it in a tutorial how to stablize it ? thx
What a great tutorial. One question, I've seen my HL videos (including yours) that zoom in and out off the subject point In a very cool way. Sometimes even changing altitude simultaneously. Is that just a case of taking zoom in/out clicks within the same trail of shots? Or is it something more 'technichal'
This is fantastic!!!
Thank you so much for your tutorial!!! I will definitely try it soon!!!
Great video. One of the end scenes shows you sailing through Venice. However, there's doesn't seem to be a constant focal point like you described at the beginning, because you turn a corner. Is this achieved by aligning a second focal point. If I've viewed this wrong, please let me know.
That one was tough to shoot and difficult to stabilize. I just tried to look down the canal at some point in the distance and use it as a focal point temporarily, then shift the point gradually as I could see further down the canal. I just sort of winged it. I had to stabilize it in many stages with different sets of tracking points. If you try to shoot that kind of hyperlapse, you might find it is difficult or impossible to stabilize.
Then you have pretty good eye-sight. I've watched it over and over and can't find the focal point - bravo!
EPIC effort doing that through the crowd at Asakusa Sensoji Temple!! :-O
Good Stuff. . Thanks for sharing. Looking forward to using the info.
How do you import the Images ? Just as JPG Sequence? And what do you do with the raw files ? Can you do a tutorial how to edit the hyperlapse footage?
WOW! Thanks for explaining your techniques
Simple and effective, thank you so much for making this! :)
What lens would you recommend to use every time? I have a 18-50mm but also a 50mm prime, are 50mm prime lenses just as good providing you get the composition the same? (If there's enough space etc)
A 50mm prime would typically be sharper than a zoom lens at 50mm, so that would be a good choice vs. using the 18-50 all the way zoomed in. If you're shooting on a sensor with a 1.5 or 1.6 crop ratio, then anything 30mm or longer is probably pretty safe. I shoot wider than that sometimes if I can't get a good composition with a lens that long and if you're careful to align the images precisely while shooting it can sometimes work well.
This is an awesome video. Really helped
I just learned that Adobe Premiere Pro has warp stabilizer in it. What is the process of bringing all my images into Premiere so I could apply the stabilizer to the images? Do I need to create an image sequence? Also you may have stated this in the video but I noticed some of your clips were faster or slower than others. If you know you want a particular shot to be fast like your shot of the National Mall how do you decide how many steps to take between shots? Same question if you want your shot to be slower. Lastly, how long are you shooting at each location? Thanks!
THis was really helpfull! I'm gonna try it! Thank you
Thanks for the video. Lots of good info.
Please watch some TH-cam videos on normalizing audio in videos. Your music is way too loud compared to the speech parts. It is a pain to have to adjust the audio volume all during the video.
Wow Awesome! can't wait to give this a try
Cool and informative, mate. Cheers
GREAT TUTORIAL. THANK YOU!
Thank you Adam for the video.
Great video thanks! Look forward to trying this. ☺
What time interval would you normally leave between shots in a hyperlapse?
Eric Einárson Yeah I would like to know as well
Since I usually don't use an intervalometer, the time varies a little bit from shot to shot but typically about 3-5 seconds. On a boat sometimes I use an intervalometer and I'd typically set it to 2 seconds. It depends on how fast the boat is going and how far away my subject is.
its all relative to your surroundings and situation. if everything around you is fast (i.e. clouds,people movement, car movement, ect.) you want to try to shoot something maybe a little more faster just to have things a little more smooth and looking better. if the area is calm and not much movement you have more of a window between your shots. It all comes down to experience. Shoot a few (yah they are time consuming) and learn as you go.
Great video! I'm totally inspired to try this.. From a boat of course!
Great! I will use your method.. What about post processing?
Mike guitar Check the description for links to a couple of hyperlapse stabilization tutorials I put together.
Nice vid! I was wondering, do you export all the photos into JPG after giving them that edit or do you just edit them in AE raw?
Thanks in advance!
When you are talking in front of the camera, the clouds in the sky move in a stepped manner, while the flags by the building billow smoothly.
TLDF for Mac works great for deflickering timelapse
Amazing video! Thank you for this!
Great video.. nicely explained.