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Comments
6 comments
A Photo interval plan is what you would create but DL doesn’t stitch them all of together to create the hyper-lapse video regardless of drone or plan. All the processing would need to be done separately by the pilot. Same with mapping which only takes the photos.
Thank you, that information helped a lot! Are there any stitching apps you can recommend for iOS?
Hyperlapse (which is really just a moving timelapse) and maps are very different things.
Creating a hyperlapse is literally just putting the photos one after another on to a video. Video is nothing more than a series of images after all. The only difference is time. If you take a photo every 2 seconds during the flight and put them on a 30 frames per second (FPS) video then for every 30 photos (60 seconds) of flight you will have one second of video.
Any decent video editor will let you import a series of photos and add them as frames. There are a lot of editors to choose from.
If you plan on doing a lot of editing in the future, and are willing to invest time learning the system then Davinci Resolve has an impressive free version that will more than cover 95% of users, but it does have a steep learning curve.
It's possible to make a timelapse from a normal video with Avidemux. A hyperlapse will be better if you run the output through a stabilizer (e.g. DaVinci Resolve).
For me it would be way to much time invested to get a 5 to 20 second hyper-lapse video. My MA2 has that ability built in the app so it’s done automatically within seconds. I rarely use it. I’d get a drone with that capability if your going to do a lot of them but nothing wrong with learning software and enjoying the outcome.
Thanks for the detailed explanations, that saved me a lot of time! I’ll definitely try Davinci Resolve and Avidemux next time I have got some drone shots
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