Brian Maynard
May 27th, 2009, 05:14 PM
Hi,
I am still a rookie and searched for a similar problem, but didn't see anything so I thought that I would ask.
I videotaped an event last weekend with two Canon XH A1 cameras. I taped in 3 different locations. After capturing the video to my computer, the video from the first two locations looks fine, but the video shot in the last location has a slight "pulse" every 1/2 second or so where the brightness and color changes very slightly. I can see it on the Canvas and on the Waveform scope.
Any ideas what is causing it. It was taped in 1080i60 at 29.97. First I thought that the problem was caused because the sequence was set to anamorphic DV, but when I viewed it in HDV, it had the same problem. It is not real noticeable, but I noticed it. Is it a lighting issue?
Thanks in advance for any help.
Brian
Jonathan Massey
May 27th, 2009, 06:33 PM
could be that you filmed in an interior and the light frequency was messing with the shot as the shutter settings were not in balance with the light source ( for example this is really noticeable when filming a computer screen).
I Always manage to avoid this problem, but perhaps a de flicker plugin can fix your image.
Brian Maynard
May 27th, 2009, 07:19 PM
Hi Jonathan,
thank you for taking the time to help.
A "deflicker" plug-in? I have never heard of that, but it is a good suggestion and I will do a search and see what I can find.
Thank you.
Brian
Robert Lane
May 28th, 2009, 12:10 AM
If you shot in any auto-exposure mode it could also have been the camera making constant white-balance and exposure changes, the pulsing might be minute shutter-speed changes made by the camera - at not too uncommon issue when in auto modes.
If you could up load a few seconds of the clip we could better identify the possible cause and solution.
Brian Maynard
May 28th, 2009, 06:04 AM
Hi Robert.
Thank you for taking the time to help.
The video was shot in auto-exposure mode and I think that your analysis is correct.
Assuming that is the issue, can you suggest a fix?
I see that there is a "deflicker" filter in FCP. Would that help?
I also read a post that suggested that there is an After Effects filter that might help. Any detail on that would be appreciated.
I will get some of the footage up in a little bit also.
Brian
Robert Lane
May 28th, 2009, 08:31 AM
If the problem is in fact auto-exposure "pumping" then a de-flicker filter won't help, de-flicker is actually used for a something unrelated to exposure so it wouldn't help anyway.
Unless you're in a constantly changing lighting situation that makes it impossible to track manually such as a fast-moving event (reality TV comes to mind) you should *always* be shooting in full-manual exposure. Any auto-exposure should be limited to iris (aperture) and white-balance only and shutter-speed should always remain fixed.
It would take an expensive session in a professional color-correction facility to manually correct these pumping issues frame-by-frame, so you may be stuck with the final result. Until I see a clip however I can't offer any method for masking the problem.
Chad Dyle
May 31st, 2009, 12:01 PM
I just updated a post I started about this. Here is the link to a clip that I made of what is happening to me.
www.chaddyleproductions.com/video/sample.mov (Right click, "Save As")
Mitchell Lewis
June 1st, 2009, 05:00 PM
What format is that MOV? Quicktime can't open it on my computer.
Robert Lane
June 1st, 2009, 06:22 PM
Right, that clip is either corrupt or isn't in a supported format that any Mac-based player can handle. I haven't seen a clip from Brian's issue either.