It’s slick and smooth indeed. Now let us see someone producing an HDR version — using say, five shots one or two stops apart per final frame. The new HDR de-ghosting in CS5 would then sure come in handy!
BTW, that de-ghosting function works splendidly, so thanks for all that effort. My only objection is that it only works when tonemapping the HDR into 8/16-bit images — we can’t produce a de-ghosted 32-bit file, alas.
hi john!
perhaps you like this i discvovered recently from a swiss guy: http://www.magictimelapse.ch
imho it’s extremely beautiful.
he posted some nice tutorials how he did this in after effects, premiere elements and photoshop on his blog ( http://magictimelapse.blogspot.com ).
thomas
It’s slick and smooth indeed. Now let us see someone producing an HDR version — using say, five shots one or two stops apart per final frame. The new HDR de-ghosting in CS5 would then sure come in handy!
BTW, that de-ghosting function works splendidly, so thanks for all that effort. My only objection is that it only works when tonemapping the HDR into 8/16-bit images — we can’t produce a de-ghosted 32-bit file, alas.
John,
Some flash goodness on the oil spill at the NYT
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/05/28/us/20100528_GULF_TIMELINE.html
Ken in KY
hi john!
perhaps you like this i discvovered recently from a swiss guy:
http://www.magictimelapse.ch
imho it’s extremely beautiful.
he posted some nice tutorials how he did this in after effects, premiere elements and photoshop on his blog ( http://magictimelapse.blogspot.com ).
thomas