My wife runs a non-profit foundation which delivers backpacks filled with school supplies and goodies to needy kids in South America. The last time she went, I stayed home with our children and she took the VX-2000 with her. Her uncle ended up shooting the footage of the distribution. I thought that with the VX-2000 it would be easy: just set everything in auto and point and shoot. Boy was I wrong!
Here I sit now, with about two hours of captured footage of beautiful subject matter, but horribly shot video. I absolutely HAVE to do this because it's my wife and it's really important to her and her work.
Here's what I'm dealing with:
1/ Handheld stuff shot at a distance with a lot of camera shake.
2/ Lots of shots where the autofocus was accidentally turned off.
3/ Lots of dirt on the lense.
4/ Lots of dark forground shots against a bright background.
5/ A couple of dozen stills saved on a CD at 640 by 480 resolution.
Here's what I'm finding so far:
The VirtualDub "Deshaker" plugin for Vegas is absolutely amazing, but incredibly time consuming. I can get some steady looking shots if I just take the time.
Spot's idea of two layering the footage with itself, sharpening the top layer, and then adjusting the opacity of the top layer gives me results that are making me hopeful that I can salvage at least some of the out of focus shots.
Does anyone have a good idea about how to handle video that is too backlit? Actually any "how to rescue badly shot video" tips and techniques would be appreciated.
Here I sit now, with about two hours of captured footage of beautiful subject matter, but horribly shot video. I absolutely HAVE to do this because it's my wife and it's really important to her and her work.
Here's what I'm dealing with:
1/ Handheld stuff shot at a distance with a lot of camera shake.
2/ Lots of shots where the autofocus was accidentally turned off.
3/ Lots of dirt on the lense.
4/ Lots of dark forground shots against a bright background.
5/ A couple of dozen stills saved on a CD at 640 by 480 resolution.
Here's what I'm finding so far:
The VirtualDub "Deshaker" plugin for Vegas is absolutely amazing, but incredibly time consuming. I can get some steady looking shots if I just take the time.
Spot's idea of two layering the footage with itself, sharpening the top layer, and then adjusting the opacity of the top layer gives me results that are making me hopeful that I can salvage at least some of the out of focus shots.
Does anyone have a good idea about how to handle video that is too backlit? Actually any "how to rescue badly shot video" tips and techniques would be appreciated.