How did Mocha stabilize the buildings and the front with a single layer and two shapes that track different movements? Couldn't this same technique have been applied in the video of the little lion where the front was left with a little movement? Excellent tutorial by the way, keep it up.
Great question. Basically we got an average of the movements to get each stabilized up (but not necessarily 100%). Where there is large(r) parallax in the clip this is easier to see, and shows itself in weird warping. This is the effect we see with the lion cub and becomes even more pronounced when the camera is moving. Hope that makes sense. Thanks for following the course and keep the questions coming.
'If that was happening in my city, I would be a bit concerned"
To be fair, it would be concerning :D
How did Mocha stabilize the buildings and the front with a single layer and two shapes that track different movements? Couldn't this same technique have been applied in the video of the little lion where the front was left with a little movement? Excellent tutorial by the way, keep it up.
Great question. Basically we got an average of the movements to get each stabilized up (but not necessarily 100%). Where there is large(r) parallax in the clip this is easier to see, and shows itself in weird warping. This is the effect we see with the lion cub and becomes even more pronounced when the camera is moving.
Hope that makes sense. Thanks for following the course and keep the questions coming.
Thanks for answering... now everything is much clearer to me and I'm leaving with something new like parallax.
Excellent tutorial 👍
Thanks so much. Glad you are joining us through this training.
If you’d done position scale and rotate instead of warp it would have avoided the buildings leaning
But still would have stabilized around the clouds rather than the buildings. That was the point of showing it.
Superb sir please on Parallex offset track class over mocha pro