I came back from SF to the UK 2 months ago. I stayed at the Fairmont Hotel for 6 nights, had a great time. Really loved SF, considering all the negative views from the Media outlets. It has its problems but so do most cities. Still a beautiful city 👍🏻
While this is a nice, no-narrative, scenic tour today, in the future (should it survive somehow, somewhere) it will be a truly fascinating video as it takes the time to do the walk-around and show the viewer all sides. These sort of videos and photos of the past are always the most interesting to me, showing not ANOTHER picture of the Empire State Bldg or the Forbidden City gate, but what’s across the street looking out from the landmark. The shots no one ever takes because, well because it’s Grauman’s Chinese Theater! But it’s the stuff across the street that changes and these sort of videos (and photos) help us to see that, decades on.
Yes, for a lot of my videos I use a DJI Pocket 2, which is a small camera with a built in mechanical gimbal. But because the camera is small, it is very susceptible to bouncing up and down on the Z axis (but it doesn't shake side to side or tilt forward and backward). Bigger cameras don't have this problem as much because they are heavier and your arm won't move up and down as much when you walk. A big camera might also have IBIS, which can smooth out some of the up and down.
@@StrollwithMe1 interesting. So when the video is downloaded i understand some editing programs can stabilize image? I know the runcam is stabilized via the editing tool.
@@Beck-Stein Yes, postproduction stabilization in an editor like Final Cut or Davinci Resolve can help some clips, but in my experience it does not work on this type of continuous shooting. You get a lot of wobble artifact, particularly in the corners, and it ends up looking worse than the original. The exception to this would be cameras that have built in gyroscopic data, which can be read by an external program like gyroflow or catalyst browse (if you have one of the compatible Sony cameras).
I came back from SF to the UK 2 months ago. I stayed at the Fairmont Hotel for 6 nights, had a great time. Really loved SF, considering all the negative views from the Media outlets. It has its problems but so do most cities. Still a beautiful city 👍🏻
Great
Thank you
While this is a nice, no-narrative, scenic tour today, in the future (should it survive somehow, somewhere) it will be a truly fascinating video as it takes the time to do the walk-around and show the viewer all sides. These sort of videos and photos of the past are always the most interesting to me, showing not ANOTHER picture of the Empire State Bldg or the Forbidden City gate, but what’s across the street looking out from the landmark. The shots no one ever takes because, well because it’s Grauman’s Chinese Theater! But it’s the stuff across the street that changes and these sort of videos (and photos) help us to see that, decades on.
Amazing tour. Ru using an iphone for this video?
Thank you, no DJI Pocket 2
Excellent video
Thank you very much!
@@StrollwithMe1 You are welcome
pro footaage-dear- 👋
Just subscribed to ur channel ♥
Im sorry what did u mean by pro footaage?!
Where is the glass outside elevator
I noticed all your vids are rocky. Do you not have a gimlet?
Yes, for a lot of my videos I use a DJI Pocket 2, which is a small camera with a built in mechanical gimbal. But because the camera is small, it is very susceptible to bouncing up and down on the Z axis (but it doesn't shake side to side or tilt forward and backward). Bigger cameras don't have this problem as much because they are heavier and your arm won't move up and down as much when you walk. A big camera might also have IBIS, which can smooth out some of the up and down.
@@StrollwithMe1 interesting. So when the video is downloaded i understand some editing programs can stabilize image? I know the runcam is stabilized via the editing tool.
@@Beck-Stein Yes, postproduction stabilization in an editor like Final Cut or Davinci Resolve can help some clips, but in my experience it does not work on this type of continuous shooting. You get a lot of wobble artifact, particularly in the corners, and it ends up looking worse than the original.
The exception to this would be cameras that have built in gyroscopic data, which can be read by an external program like gyroflow or catalyst browse (if you have one of the compatible Sony cameras).
why would you ruin this with music
As soon as I see hip hop style graffiti then I'm in the wrong.area
Hello good afternoon!!
¿Would you be interested in selling your youtube channel?
I would like to buy it!
I will wait for your answer,
greetings!!