This is a nice video, there is however, quit a bit of jitter in the footage, I downloaded the file and played it outside the Vimeo site and it was a little better. Do you think this is due to the lower frame rate? was this originally shot in 4K 24fps? At some points the icebergs seem to be vibrating.
This is a nice video, there is however, quit a bit of jitter in the footage, I downloaded the file and played it outside the Vimeo site and it was a little better. Do you think this is due to the lower frame rate? was this originally shot in 4K 24fps? At some points the icebergs seem to be vibrating.
If you have a Vimeo Pro account you should be able to download the original 4K file. Assuming you have something capable of playing 4K back smoothly, check it out and let me know if you still see jitter.
I uploaded the 4K file to Vimeo and it's their codecs that are used to down convert to lower resolutions, so I wouldn't rule that out.
If you have a Vimeo Pro account you should be able to download the original 4K file. Assuming you have something capable of playing 4K back smoothly, check it out and let me know if you still see jitter.
I uploaded the 4K file to Vimeo and it's their codecs that are used to down convert to lower resolutions, so I wouldn't rule that out.
Such nice shots. Great color work too. I love MA, btw--spent a lot of time there over my lifetime--family, etc.
The "jitter" is a rolling shutter that DSLR's and our I1 camera produce when we can't get the shutter low enough.
When we all have a deeper ND filter, we will be able to shoot a shutter at 60-100ish and you won't see that.
Such nice shots. Great color work too. I love MA, btw--spent a lot of time there over my lifetime--family, etc.
The "jitter" is a rolling shutter that DSLR's and our I1 camera produce when we can't get the shutter low enough.
When we all have a deeper ND filter, we will be able to shoot a shutter at 60-100ish and you won't see that.
Hey, man.
What I see is rolling shutter. The scan lines that start at the top and move down. Often happens in movement, ie: pans. This isn't a problem with Vimeo, or 4k playback. This is a fast shutter speed chosen on the camera that we will all be able to take care of soon..hopefully..lol..with a better (ie: darker) ND filter.
I have a hard time going under even 400 on sunny days here, which produces great stills from video, but produces those scan lines occasionally. There's a rolling shutter effect in Premiere which can fix it. I found a video for you. It's ok..the VO is hilarious, and he covers a few other things that we're not discussing here, but it's still effective. I use this filter occasionally, and it does take some tweaking, and seems to behave differently for every clip--but is still super powerful.
Here's the video:
Hmm. Ok I'll have to take another look, I hadn't actually noticed it on my monitor. I'll have to play on the 69" 4K TV (no undesirable video artifact can hide there!).
I was running ND filter, had balanced the props, was using 1/60 with ISO 100, etc. Sounds like we do indeed need an ND filter with more oomph then.
I've had mixed results getting rid of jello in post. PP is awesome but it can only do so much.
Hmm. Ok I'll have to take another look, I hadn't actually noticed it on my monitor. I'll have to play on the 69" 4K TV (no undesirable video artifact can hide there!).
I was running ND filter, had balanced the props, was using 1/60 with ISO 100, etc. Sounds like we do indeed need an ND filter with more oomph then.
I've had mixed results getting rid of jello in post. PP is awesome but it can only do so much.
Ya, "jello" is a by-product of a rolling shutter. People refer to a camera that produces jello, but it's a shutter speed thing. I can't seem to get down to 60..like ever..unless it's getting later near dusk. Need me some serious ND, baby. The stock one is helpful, but not enough.