My first 4K format sold
boscorelli
25 Jan 2011 07:13
It's great you sold 4K footage, vadervideo.I have some clips, too.Animations and timelapses but no sales, YET! Hope very soon!
https://www.pond5.com/de/video-sound-effects-music-after-effects/1/artist%3Aboscorelli-4k.html
and one of them :
https://www.pond5.com/de/video-sound-effects-music-after-effects/1/artist%3Aboscorelli-4k.html
and one of them :
danielschweinert
25 Jan 2011 11:16
Hmmm....now I should upload all my timelapse footage as 4K too ;-)
bryanbush
6 Feb 2011 16:52
Any more 4K sell?
ironstrike
7 Feb 2011 00:06
The human eye caps out at about 3k... that is, beyond that you cant see any extra detail on a movie screen.
vadervideo
14 May 2011 17:20
And now another one - seems these formats are starting to get more and more popular...
Eddie
15 May 2011 15:00
Wow that's a great timelapse i love the colors
vadervideo
15 May 2011 16:37
Thanks guys.. nature does wonderful job of providing in this area.. I suppose that is one thing AZ is famous for. :)
zr_media
15 May 2011 20:47
Hi Vader,
Looks like you have the same problem with sequences of stills that I had. A slight mechanical exposure difference from shot to shot creates a nasty flicker. The one solution I found to this is to shoot the stills at a faster rate. Then you can speed up the footage and use "frame blending" (After Effects) to reduce the flicker. I don't know what the equivalent solution would be in other softwares. The downside to this solution is twice the shutter wear on your DSLR. For this reason I no longer shoot timelapse clips with my still cameras, I stick with video. Of course this limits me to 1080p resulotion, but I can live with that for now. I know this was a little off-topic, but I wanted to address your first clip in this thread.
Looks like you have the same problem with sequences of stills that I had. A slight mechanical exposure difference from shot to shot creates a nasty flicker. The one solution I found to this is to shoot the stills at a faster rate. Then you can speed up the footage and use "frame blending" (After Effects) to reduce the flicker. I don't know what the equivalent solution would be in other softwares. The downside to this solution is twice the shutter wear on your DSLR. For this reason I no longer shoot timelapse clips with my still cameras, I stick with video. Of course this limits me to 1080p resulotion, but I can live with that for now. I know this was a little off-topic, but I wanted to address your first clip in this thread.
vadervideo
15 May 2011 22:42
@zr_media - actually it's only one lens that does have this problem - the canon 70-300mm. With all my other lenses there is no problem. Anybody wanna buy a lens? :) There are some software solutions available to correct this as well - one I think is even a plug-in to AE and Sony Vegas. (NewblueFX flash remover) although it says it's for removing camera flashes, I think it might do the job - but haven't tried it. Or one can simply use the color stabilize in AE http://livedocs.adobe.com/en_US/AfterEffects/8.0/help.html?content=WS3878526689cb91655866c1103a9d3c597-7bc9.html and there are some other 3rd party tools as well.
THmotion
17 May 2011 13:48
Great time lapse video! Too bad that flickers..