@@julianizdebski5035 For the video you linked I'm pretty clear. Essentially there's only one footage. You rotoscope the person out in the later part of the footage and overlay it to the original footage. Then let the original footage play until it hits the timepoint when you do the rotoscope, then your overlap footage stop there. Continue to play your original footage. In other words: the original footage plays from the beginning to the end. Say A to C. At point B you do the rotoscope. Then you overlay it on the original from A to B. Here it's a moving shot so I'm also a bit confused how it's achieved. Overall theory should be similar.
Great action. My nephew beaumont pritchard james is a steady cam operator in london. You two should link up.
amazing move my g
Hey Taj! Your video on the X1 arm was great. Do you love it? Would you recommend it? I'm thinking of getting it as my first arm. Thanks, James
Thanks James, yes, absolutely would recommend it. I have had it for 4 years now and the arm is as solid as day one. Cheers
Awesome!
Neat work
you should see some of the moves Engineers pull off consantly!
Where can i buy this steadycam
It is a combo of Smartsystem Gear in Italy and Tiffen in the U.S.
혹시 비행 추가촬영 스테디캠 가능하신가요? 연락주세요 사랑합니다
how to be dutch.
Yesh
🙏🌹🇮🇳 PSSPPP 🇮🇳 PALOJU JAI SRIRAM 🇮🇳🌹🙏
Why does that look like a film camera
It is a weighted practice cage with an HD security camera
😁😁😁👍👍👍⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Super noob but what’s this effect called (waking into yourself)
It is a built-in affect with the Insta 360 camera.
@@tajtcam sorry - not the 360, but the “waking into yourself”
Same effect here at 1:08
ruclips.net/video/0wwxiMxJaCY/видео.html
@@julianizdebski5035 For the video you linked I'm pretty clear. Essentially there's only one footage. You rotoscope the person out in the later part of the footage and overlay it to the original footage. Then let the original footage play until it hits the timepoint when you do the rotoscope, then your overlap footage stop there. Continue to play your original footage.
In other words: the original footage plays from the beginning to the end. Say A to C. At point B you do the rotoscope. Then you overlay it on the original from A to B.
Here it's a moving shot so I'm also a bit confused how it's achieved. Overall theory should be similar.