Great job editing the photos. Here is what I do differently in video creation: I crop the first 4:3 photo to 16:9 while in Lightroom and adjust vertically where I want it cropped. Then I copy all settings from the first photo to the rest and it crops them all correctly before exporting. That looks faster and easier than your shown method. Also, why did you use Photoshop to create the video instead of importing all the photos into Premiere and using it to create the video and stabilize it? I was told by Adobe that using Lightroom to create videos results in some compression compared to Premiere (I confirmed that the finished files are smaller with LR) and I assume the same thing holds for Photoshop since both programs are meant primarily to edit photos and offer some limitations working with video.
Enjoyed the video for setting up the hyperlapse on the drone and Fly app however there are a couple of quicker ways to render the final video. The photoshop step was unnecessary and could have been skipped as most NLEs will recognise an image sequence. I’m sure Premiere does. I use Davinci Resolve Studio and import the raw dng sequence that the drone creates and do the colour correction and grading in Davinci. That skips the whole Lightroom import/edit/sync/export step too. This saves a lot of time and hdd space! Not sure if Premiere can import the dngs as a sequence, but even if it doesn’t you should skip the photoshop render step, which adds more time and also degrades the image further too. I hope this helps.
All I can say is-WOW!!! This looks great. I have Premiere Pro. I hope I can use that instead of Final Cut Pro. Thanks for a great how-to video, and it's amazing how much more striking it looks after you color-graded it. Thanks for doing all this for us. Marc.
Hi Marc, thanks so much for the kind words. That really motivates me to make more content so really appreciated. Colour grade is everything in my experience. Like a dark art though!!
Is there anyway to preview what the movement between the waypoints will look like before using up a whole battery taking 300 photos? I suppose it should be possible if you input the exact same info into a video waypoints mission but this seems a little annoying
Hi there! I understand exactly what you mean. What I tend to do is visualise before then fly it just with video. This gives you a good idea. Even between setting the first way point I fly as how I want it to look then set the second finishing way point. Not perfect but will give you a good idea!
Hi there, I would use warp stabiliser. It just seems to do the most thorough job and is the most intuitive stabilising method I have seen. If you only have FCPX or DaVinci either of those still do a good job. It’s just preference to the end result and how much work you’re willing to put in!
Sure! But this works only if u fly a hyperlapse in a straight forward or backward direction! So create a footage with this two options. Then u have to keyframe your footage in program like Davinci or Premiere Pro etc. (Flightdirection = forward) Set your first keyframe on your first videoframe. Set your digital zoom to your preference. Test a little bit. Last keyframe at the and of your video: zoom out to your native resolution. E voilà. (Flightdirection = backwards) --> excatly the same, with the oposite zoom-settings. First keyframe without crop. Last keyframe->zoom in as u want.
How do you get authorisation to fly at night? My understanding is that unless you have special permission (at least here in Australia), it's illegal to fly at night.
That screen freeze made me realize that there's so much in life I've to know and understand... You my brother connected in me! TY!
Great job editing the photos. Here is what I do differently in video creation: I crop the first 4:3 photo to 16:9 while in Lightroom and adjust vertically where I want it cropped. Then I copy all settings from the first photo to the rest and it crops them all correctly before exporting. That looks faster and easier than your shown method. Also, why did you use Photoshop to create the video instead of importing all the photos into Premiere and using it to create the video and stabilize it? I was told by Adobe that using Lightroom to create videos results in some compression compared to Premiere (I confirmed that the finished files are smaller with LR) and I assume the same thing holds for Photoshop since both programs are meant primarily to edit photos and offer some limitations working with video.
Great production values. Just one thing, the reflective desk surface has to go. Time for a new desk.
Hi Michael, thanks so much. Also thanks for the feedback on the desk, will look into investing in a new one!
@@DanMarshFilms No, the shiny reflection is great, keep it!
The best video of drone footage hyperlapse I have watched by far, with a thorough explanation of the complete process. Thank you very much! 🙂
Thank You!
Enjoyed the video for setting up the hyperlapse on the drone and Fly app however there are a couple of quicker ways to render the final video. The photoshop step was unnecessary and could have been skipped as most NLEs will recognise an image sequence. I’m sure Premiere does. I use Davinci Resolve Studio and import the raw dng sequence that the drone creates and do the colour correction and grading in Davinci. That skips the whole Lightroom import/edit/sync/export step too. This saves a lot of time and hdd space! Not sure if Premiere can import the dngs as a sequence, but even if it doesn’t you should skip the photoshop render step, which adds more time and also degrades the image further too. I hope this helps.
All I can say is-WOW!!! This looks great. I have Premiere Pro. I hope I can use that instead of Final Cut Pro. Thanks for a great how-to video, and it's amazing how much more striking it looks after you color-graded it. Thanks for doing all this for us. Marc.
Hi Marc, thanks so much for the kind words. That really motivates me to make more content so really appreciated. Colour grade is everything in my experience. Like a dark art though!!
Excellent Sir! Thank you!
Very well explained. Thank you for the tutorial 😊
Thanks your video was very informative.
Thankyou, Great Video From A Learner 😊
Great video.john
Thanks John - I hope you found it useful
Nicely done Dan! I greatly appreciate the level of detail walking through the entire process. Much better than others I've seen on YT.
Hi there, thanks so much! Really appreciate you stopping by and glad you found it useful! Will be sure to make more in the near future!
19:35 You can set your camera direction to your preference like in waypoints :)
Great explanation with practical examples, thank you!
Great tutorial Dan, always better when from a fellow Brit. You now have a new subscriber 👍
Thanks for this. I just bought an Air 3 and your tutorial will come in handy with my new drone. Great job and you just gained a new subscriber.
Hi Ronald!! Great news, it’s a fantastic drone the air 3! Let us know if there is anything specific you would like to know. Happy flying!
This is exactly what I needed, well done!
Awesome, glad to hear it was helpful!
very informative, THANK YOU ! now i feel ready to try it myself, keeping your hints in mind. I've subscribed to your channel.
Thank you for stopping by! Glad it was helpful, can’t wait to see your results!! :D
Great tutorial
Thank you so much!
Excellent and most comprehensive tutorial, thank you very much, liked and subscribed, more of the same please.
Well Done Thank you!!
nice will try😊
Is there anyway to preview what the movement between the waypoints will look like before using up a whole battery taking 300 photos?
I suppose it should be possible if you input the exact same info into a video waypoints mission but this seems a little annoying
Hi there! I understand exactly what you mean. What I tend to do is visualise before then fly it just with video. This gives you a good idea. Even between setting the first way point I fly as how I want it to look then set the second finishing way point. Not perfect but will give you a good idea!
Hi wat program you use in this video or make editing your video?
Any downsides to using warp stabilizer? If you only had one stabilization method to choose from what would it be?
Hi there, I would use warp stabiliser. It just seems to do the most thorough job and is the most intuitive stabilising method I have seen. If you only have FCPX or DaVinci either of those still do a good job. It’s just preference to the end result and how much work you’re willing to put in!
@@DanMarshFilms what about third party apps? Any of them
Better than warp stabilizer?
Any idea how I can do a hyperlapse in a dolly zoom
Sure! But this works only if u fly a hyperlapse in a straight forward or backward direction!
So create a footage with this two options. Then u have to keyframe your footage in program like Davinci or Premiere Pro etc.
(Flightdirection = forward) Set your first keyframe on your first videoframe. Set your digital zoom to your preference. Test a little bit.
Last keyframe at the and of your video: zoom out to your native resolution.
E voilà.
(Flightdirection = backwards) --> excatly the same, with the oposite zoom-settings. First keyframe without crop. Last keyframe->zoom in as u want.
How do you get authorisation to fly at night? My understanding is that unless you have special permission (at least here in Australia), it's illegal to fly at night.
Night flights are permitted in the uk without any form of authorisation
I wonder how many people came here to be given an explanation of "shutter speed", or to learn what noise is...Ffs dude.
Glad you enjoyed the video :) Glad I could help teach you about the basics of photography with my tutorial!
I don't have a dji drone so I'll move on...