Introducing RAWBlend (+AutoExposure) - RAW interpolator
Author
Message
blueeden
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 5:45 pm Posts: 70
Introducing RAWBlend (+AutoExposure) - RAW interpolator
Hi,
I wanted to introduce a new tool today for timelapse. RAWBlend blends between frames, adjusting settings like exposure, contrast, color balance, vibrance, highlights, shadows, etc.,
Check out the 2 minute presentation I made.
One of the best features of RAWBlend is AutoExposure, which can keyframe your entire timelapse with proper exposure in a single click. Even if your camera settings change (aperture, ISO, shutter-speed), RAWBlend will take those into account and calculate the theoretical changes in light - then adjusts for it in your timelapse animation. You only need to process the starting and ending keyframes. In the videos above, I only processed the start and end, doing no adjustments by hand. I think this is pretty cool.
Re: Introducing RAWBlend (+AutoExposure) - RAW interpolator
It does blend WB.
It can interpolate between any of the basic "color/exposure settings" in Lightroom or Photoshop (temperature, tint, exposure, brightness, contrast, shadow/highlight, fill/recovery, blacks, whites, vibrance, and saturation).
There may be support in the future to animate other settings like vignette, shadow/highlight color tints, and so forth, but those aren't generally used unless for special effects.
Re: Introducing RAWBlend (+AutoExposure) - RAW interpolator
As i got nothing to complain about the software itself, the support is quite disappointing. I've requested a license change (going from windows to osx) 15 days only after purchasing my license and never got any reply. So much for supporting developers.
Re: Introducing RAWBlend (+AutoExposure) - RAW interpolator
DrMacabre wrote:
Interesting, what's the differences with LRTimelapse ?
blueeden wrote:
It does blend WB.
It can interpolate between any of the basic "color/exposure settings" in Lightroom or Photoshop (temperature, tint, exposure, brightness, contrast, shadow/highlight, fill/recovery, blacks, whites, vibrance, and saturation).
There may be support in the future to animate other settings like vignette, shadow/highlight color tints, and so forth, but those aren't generally used unless for special effects.
It looks like at this stage difference is that LRTimelapse can do more.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot post attachments in this forum