just on technical side of things, you can eliminate the jerkiness (with the vid, this isn't a personal attack)
*by propping your elbow on the sill (im assuming you're just sticking your cam out the left window) or some other surface like an armrest (poor man's tripod)
*using stabilizer in post if you have video editing software. Premiere has warp stabilizer that does wonders, it's piss easy. Its been a few years since I was in honkers, but they used to sell pirate software every second shop in mong kok
( , Fri 18 Oct 2024, 4:35, Share, Reply)
*by propping your elbow on the sill (im assuming you're just sticking your cam out the left window) or some other surface like an armrest (poor man's tripod)
*using stabilizer in post if you have video editing software. Premiere has warp stabilizer that does wonders, it's piss easy. Its been a few years since I was in honkers, but they used to sell pirate software every second shop in mong kok
( , Fri 18 Oct 2024, 4:35, Share, Reply)
Well it's a video from 15 years ago with a rubbish camcorder from a very shaky tram
From memory I was steadying my arms against the ledge at the front (not out of the window) for large sections, I'd left my tripod in the UK but not sure it would have made much of a difference anyway. I did put it through stabilization software for the music video I made from it (in the description on youtube) but ultimately it's a done thing from an age ago and it is what it is.
( , Fri 18 Oct 2024, 9:53, Share, Reply)
From memory I was steadying my arms against the ledge at the front (not out of the window) for large sections, I'd left my tripod in the UK but not sure it would have made much of a difference anyway. I did put it through stabilization software for the music video I made from it (in the description on youtube) but ultimately it's a done thing from an age ago and it is what it is.
( , Fri 18 Oct 2024, 9:53, Share, Reply)