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jello effect


Ed Cesnalis

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I could see why that could happen... jello is a function of the vibrations (movement) and the interaction with the rolling shutter. The video stabilization essentially zooms in a bit, then tries to compensate for jiggle by offsetting the frame in the opposite direction, by the same amount of pixels as the movement. So it is creating it's own movement. So, that artificial movement is interacting with the way the shutter captured the scene, and gives you jello. 'Sux.

It would be nice if there was a "jello removal" filter.

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