Episode #69: How to Get a Lock Down Stabilization Effect
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By Paul Ezzy
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Comments (8)

David Hurd 09/28/2010
Nice!
Oleg Savkin 09/28/2010
Thank you very much, it is useful
kenichi nishimoto 09/28/2010
Nice!
Francois Truffaut 09/28/2010
Cannes. It's close to Nice but a bit further.
Jaeson Koszarsky 10/08/2010
But how well does it do with something with more substantial? There's very little shake to start with in the original clip used here.

I think this clip might be useful to demonstrate BorisFX's object removal plug-in, take out the paraglider.
Boris 10/19/2010
In fact, because the jitter in this clip is so subtle, the task of stabilizing is more challenging. We picked this clip to set our stabilizer algorithm apart from other offerings. We are able to precisely track the area of the image defined by the horizon line and use that as a reference to lock the shot. The footage came from a customer in Denmark who could not figure this out on his own so we made a tutorial. The shot was done with a cheap tripod on a windy day so the jitter is minimal but clearly noticeable. More obvious shake, such as in a handheld shot, is much easier to stabilize.
CK Axelsson 11/03/2010
Thank you for video demonstration. Unfortunately, my stabilizator - used as in demonstration - does not start when I press the analyze bottom. ?
foghog 10/04/2011
In Adobe premiere CS5.5 shold I see those dots/markers on the frame? I don't have any.
Is it possible to drag corners in Premiere or should I use the nombers only?

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