Using VirtualDub and the latest version of Deshaker, I can do a really good job of steadying shakey HDV footage. If you render the stabilized HDV to SD, you get a really nice stabilized SD shot with none of the loss of sharpness you get from deshaking SD clips directly. The only problem is how time-consuming it is. Each shot has to be done in two passes and there is no way to batch file if you need to fix a number of shots. Also, you lose the last 2002 frames unless you smart-render a little black extension to the back of the shot, and I also end up doing a smart-render to get rid of the first 2002 black frames at the beginning of the stabilized clip.
These are some of the reasons I moved on from Deshaker with VirtualDub to Steadyhand by Dynapel for stabilizing DV footage. With Steadyhand, I can batch stabilize a bunch of clips at once and I don't have issues with extending the backs or cropping the fronts of clips. Unfortunately Steadyhand does not work with HDV footage, so I'm back to using Deshaker and VirtualDub. The end result is just fantastic but it takes a whole lot of time and about 4 individually done processes per clip.
Is there a better way? I was looking at BorisFX, but I can't see if it has such niceties as setting up a batch file to stabilize a bunch of clips at once.
These are some of the reasons I moved on from Deshaker with VirtualDub to Steadyhand by Dynapel for stabilizing DV footage. With Steadyhand, I can batch stabilize a bunch of clips at once and I don't have issues with extending the backs or cropping the fronts of clips. Unfortunately Steadyhand does not work with HDV footage, so I'm back to using Deshaker and VirtualDub. The end result is just fantastic but it takes a whole lot of time and about 4 individually done processes per clip.
Is there a better way? I was looking at BorisFX, but I can't see if it has such niceties as setting up a batch file to stabilize a bunch of clips at once.