Wait maybe I misunderstood, my image is not jumping at all, are you saying that in camera does it automatically and crops the picture?In camera stablization?
A distinct possibility.In camera stablization?
Part of the processing for stabilizing a video is cropping the image to eliminate small jitters. Most video processing software has this option, and I suspect that is what is being done with the hyperlapses.Wait maybe I misunderstood, my image is not jumping at all, are you saying that in camera does it automatically and crops the picture?
That is true, but everything I've seen shows you having to do that yourself after. My video is not jumping at all, just the field of view is cropped straight out of the drone. Its an M2Z by the way and my still shot of the same area gives a wider area and I did not zoom in at all.Part of the processing for stabilizing a video is cropping the image to eliminate small jitters. Most video processing software has this option, and I suspect that is what is being done with the hyperlapses.
Given that what it's doing is assembling stills into a video, I wonder if maybe it's cropping each still to the resolution of the video rather than resizing the still to make it fit? Or maybe cropping each still to an even multiple of the pixel size of the video?That is true, but everything I've seen shows you having to do that yourself after. My video is not jumping at all, just the field of view is cropped straight out of the drone. Its an M2Z by the way and my still shot of the same area gives a wider area and I did not zoom in at all.
That is true, but everything I've seen shows you having to do that yourself after. My video is not jumping at all, just the field of view is cropped straight out of the drone. Its an M2Z by the way and my still shot of the same area gives a wider area and I did not zoom in at all.
Here is how you can analyze what it is doing. Set it to a timed shot every X seconds. Take a series. Assemble the photos in to a video. See if it is full size frame and see if the video stutters from the movement.
My bet is that it is in camera stabilization.
Nice work. I enjoyed those very much...A distinct possibility.
I haven't tried one yet, mostly because I lack decent subjects. If I do I'll save original images as well so I can make my own afterwards if I'm unhappy with the DJI one.
I've played a bit with timelapses on my SLR, but I get bored taking them. Also, I don't live near somewhere where they would be photogenic.
Any cloud/fog action in the sky is always good for a Hyperlapse.A distinct possibility.
I haven't tried one yet, mostly because I lack decent subjects. If I do I'll save original images as well so I can make my own afterwards if I'm unhappy with the DJI one.
I've played a bit with timelapses on my SLR, but I get bored taking them. Also, I don't live near somewhere where they would be photogenic.
Yes. Even with the stability of the Mavic 3, hyperlapses are always shaky. Even in light winds. The drone therefore applies software stabilization which by its very nature crops the images. The greater the shake, the greater the crop. You can see that this happens if you also capture raw images from the hyperlapse and import these into a video editor like Premiere Pro. The resultant video is always shaky unless you apply Warp Stabilizer (This crops the image just as happens if you let the Mavic 3 handle the complete process.) You do get more control over the choice between stability and cropping if you shoot raw and edit using a video editor though.Anyone know the reason why Hyperlapse crops the image so much?
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