New Tool for After Effects and Nuke Tackles That Wobbly 'Jell-O Effect'
Rolling-shutter artifacts occur because CMOS chips don’t update an entire frame at exactly the same time. The image is captured line by line, moving across the sensor in one direction, meaning that the picture may suffer from temporal artifacts. For example, a straight horizontal line may appear skewed as the camera pans past it, since the camera has actually swiveled some distance between the time that the top lines in the frame were captured and the time that the bottom lines are recorded. The effect can be seen to varying degrees on everything from cheap cell phone cameras to footage captured with pro cameras.
Interested? If you want a copy, it may be best to buy it now – through August 31, The Foundry is running a buy-one-get-one-free RollingShutter sale. With two copies, you can use one in After Effects and one in Nuke, or one on a workstation and one on a laptop.
For more information: www.thefoundry.co.uk
Sections: Technology
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