Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello I'm working on a project and this came up when trying to track my camera. I solved the problem but after returning to part of my footage I found the error stuck on screen. As you can see from the effects I have no camera track present in this footage. How do I remove it?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Purge your cache.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi ToddE,
Still having trouble? If so, please contact us. Here's how: FAQ: How do I contact Adobe Support?
Thanks,
Kevin
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
That does not look like a shot that would solve for a camera very well. You need fixed geometry and defined planes with detail. You might try changing the shot type.
It would really help if we saw the shot. You have also run Motion Stabilize on the shot and Camera Tracker and Motion Stabilizer are not compatible.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello, community,
same issue here.
The original file: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zb2hsd1Oe0M
I've stabilized with PowerDirector, now I'm trying to fix horizon issues. For this purpose I'm using VR Comp Editor, using this article https://helpx.adobe.com/after-effects/how-to/stabilize-track-360-footage.html, but it says "Analysis solve failed"
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You are trying to compare apples and oranges. Stabilizing a 360 VR shot is a whole different process than stabilizing a normal shot. Trying to work on a shot that is longer than just a few seconds can also be a huge problem. There is a lot of motion blur caused by excessive camera shake in your shot, and if you try and use traditional camera tracking on a normalized view like this frame from your video you will have a lot of trouble because the majority of the frame is filled with something that continually changes shape (the skier). There is very little fixed geometry in this part of the shot for any kind of camera tracking to lock onto and stabilize:
The only solution I can see for this shot is to cut it up into sections that can be tracked successfully and spend a lot of time deleting tracking markers that have attached themselves to things that change shape or that change their relationship to the horizon.
There is no miracle cure for shaky footage and there are limits to what you can fix. You're probably going to have to cut that shot up into several four or five-second segments to end up with pieces of the shot that are nice and stable.
There are several threads on stabilizing 360º footage (VR). Check those out or start a new thread on your specific question and you'll probably get some more suggestions.
Find more inspiration, events, and resources on the new Adobe Community
Explore Now