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evgeny_eJ2013-02-03 22:56:43
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evgeny_eJ, 2013-02-03 22:56:43

How to bring photos to one form to create animation from them?

There is a set of photographs of the same place from the same position. Filmed without a tripod on a simple camera. Naturally, all photographs walk relative to the object being shot.
How can you bring photos to one form to create animation from them without sharp jumps and distortions?
I'm bad at graphic editors, I'm not an artist.

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4 answer(s)
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oleksandr_veles, 2013-02-04
@evgeny_eJ

If the offset is small and the frames are similar, then it may be enough to combine the utility from hugin
align_image_stack
Next, imagemagick for cropping and ffmpeg or mencoder for video.

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Ruslan, 2013-02-03
@hands

A graphics editor is best suited for this purpose. With the help of Photoshop, you can solve both problems, align frames and make animation. In a nutshell, you need to open the first frame, then overlay the second one by adding transparency to it, adjust the position of the second frame to match the first, do the same with the rest of the frames, then crop.

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Figurnov, 2013-02-04
@Figurnov

Depending on what you want to get as a result. If you want to get an animated picture - like a GIF file, then this can be done in a graphics editor.
If you have Photoshop, call the help for Photoshop, type the word "animation" in the search bar - and everything is described in great detail how animation is done, how intermediate frames are inserted, etc.
To bring photos to a uniform look, you may need transformations: scaling, proportion correction, etc. This is done like this: open the first picture, open the layer management window (F7), select the File | Place and open the second picture. Photoshop places the second image on a new layer and allows you to change it: with the mouse you can drag this image, change its proportions (hook the mouse over the border or corner), rotate the image (the mouse pointer near the corners of the image will take the form of a curved double-headed arrow), and when you click Ctrl, you can arbitrarily change the proportions of the picture, make slopes, perspective, etc. To see the first and second picture at the same time, make the second picture in the layers palette partially transparent. Putting the second picture in the right position, click the check mark at the top of the screen to accept the changes. Now make the second image in the layers palette opaque, and load and process the third image in the same way. When you have processed all the pictures, make a crop (menu Image | Crop). And now open the Animation palette (Window | Animation command), turn on the frame-by-frame animation mode there (the button in the lower right corner), set the intervals between frames, look at the result. There are other techniques that you like And now open the Animation palette (Window | Animation command), turn on the frame-by-frame animation mode there (the button in the lower right corner), set the intervals between frames, look at the result. There are other techniques that you like And now open the Animation palette (Window | Animation command), turn on the frame-by-frame animation mode there (the button in the lower right corner), set the intervals between frames, look at the result. There are other techniques that you like
There are a lot of tutorial videos on YouTube about this.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fSYBicFgds
www.youtube.com/watch?v=dK5JqQ9QDLg
www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYSJT9x5KQI
And here they make animation from one photo
www.youtube.com/watch?v =WmiDy6EpaT0
If you want to make a video with animation, then you can do similar things in a video editor. Adobe Premiere, Sony Vegas, etc. Here is a video of how this is done in the Sony Vegas video editor:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=IG4oePcIE0A

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Antelle, 2013-02-04
@Antelle

AfterEffects can stabilize video point by point. Here , for example, it is clearly shown how to do this (although there is an advertisement for a fotik).

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