What are you guys using for post processing? I was just looking at PowerDirector 12 Ultra and it looks like it would do the trick for around $75.00.
Thanks
-slinger
Thanks
-slinger
gunslinger said:What are you guys using for post processing? I was just looking at PowerDirector 12 Ultra and it looks like it would do the trick for around $75.00.
Thanks
-slinger
ted35 said:FWIW I've used Cyberlink PDR12 Ultra, Pinnacle Studio 17, Adobe Premier, etc... For the money and ease of use I prefer PDR12. The stabilization works much better than PS17...although Prodad's Prodrenalin is best for stabilization IMHO. See
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtoYe1l-6Hs[/youtube]
ted35 said:@ rmwilson
very scientific, huh?
JustJames said:One thing I have noticed about image stabilization on the three programs I have tried... I don't like it. It works ok but man I'd sure prefer not to have to do it..I really want a gimbal for the vision.
J
ted35 said:FWIW I've used Cyberlink PDR12 Ultra, Pinnacle Studio 17, Adobe Premier, etc... For the money and ease of use I prefer PDR12. The stabilization works much better than PS17...although Prodad's Prodrenalin is best for stabilization IMHO. See
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtoYe1l-6Hs[/youtube]
rmwilson said:By the time I read this post, I had already ordered PowerDirector 12, but I was intrigued by the reference to Prodrenalin's ability to stabilize video. After reading more, I realized that Prodrenalin will also remove fisheye, which as far as I can tell can't be done with PowerDirector 12. I decided to order it as well and give them both a try. I used the stabilization feature of both on a short clip of video that was pretty jerky. They both did a good job and frankly not much difference to my eye.
Then I tried something a little outside of the box. I took the video I had corrected in Prodrenalin, opened it in PowerDirector 12, and applied its stabilization correction to the already corrected video. The results were unbelievably smooth! I expected to see a loss of quality by doing the correction twice, but it was negligible. Of course the image was cropped in a little more, but with a wide angle lens like you have on the Vision, it didn't really matter that much. If you have both programs, this might be a good method to use on really jerky video or even on moderately unstable clips.
I think my workflow from now on might be:
1) Remove the fisheye and stablilize with Prodrenalin first.
2) Open the corrected clip in PowerDirector 12. Perform any color corrections, noise reduction, adding of sound tracks, and general editing of the clip there. If it is still somewhat shaky, perform the stabilization correction again.
Ron
iquittoo said:I use Photoshop CC for quick and short films. It is amazing what Photoshop CC can do. Doesn't have any stabilization. But you have full Photoshop color correction and all the Smart Filters available when editing video. I have an old Adobe CS3 suite with Premiere and AfterEffects. Photoshop CC is quicker and easier.
Studiowise said:Bit of a thread resurection.
If anyone is using ProDad's ProDrenalin for de-fish and stabilisation, if you log into the client area there is a new download available (1.067) which includes a lens correction profile for the FC200. NOTE - this is not available via the regular download or trial version.
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