Digital Anarchy Flicker Free 113 CE for After Effects and Pro
Digital Anarchy Flicker Free 1.1.3 CE for After Effects and Premiere Pro | 11.7 MB
Flicker Free is a powerful new way to deflicker video. It solves an issue that's common for many types of video footage, be it from lights/electricity and cameras being out of sync, time lapse or slow motion (high frame rate) video. The Flicker Free plugin is very effective at removing rolling flicker that occurs with LED & fluorescent lights or computer monitors.
Flicker Free was originally designed to fix the flicker caused by varying exposures in time lapse videography. However, once we developed it, we discovered there are many reasons for flicker and that Flicker Free does a great job on most of them.
As with all Digital Anarchy plugins and products, we strive to create intuitive software that produces exceptional results while remaining dead simple to use. Check out the demo reel below for some great examples and take a look at the Features page to understand how Flicker Free will benefit you!
Presets for an Easy Workflow
They make it easy to get the right settings very quickly, without reading a huge manual. Plugins should just work.
There are several presets for different types of video footage. These are settings we've found to work well in our tests. At best, they'll instantly solve your flicker problems! (this happens a lot... so try one of the presets, it may be all you need to do) Otherwise, they provide a good starting point and you shouldn't need to make too many tweaks. Every piece of video footage is different, of course, but the types of flicker tend to be the same. So the presets usually work quite well.
Easy to Understand
Video plugins should make your life easier. The software should be doing the hard work behind the scenes so you can get work done quickly without watching hours of training videos. Flicker Free is a critical video plugin when you have footage with flicker problems, but hopefully you won't need all the time. It's good to know you can just pull it out of your toolbox and it'll just work. There's no need to re-learn complicated parameters every time you use it.
Analyzes on the Fly
Flicker Free doesn't require any 'pre-analysis' to work. Just apply it to your footage, render a couple seconds as a test and you're ready to render your entire project. It analyzes the frames as it's rendering so you don't have to wait around before you can get to work.
Deflicker Time Lapse Footage
A time lapse video requires taking a photo every 1 second or 1 hour and combining them to make the video. This can result in beautiful videos, but the problem is that the lighting changes. This causes the camera to adjust the exposure and you get flicker. Flicker Free was designed to deal with Time Lapse flicker and works beautifully on it.
Slow Motion Footage
Many lights will cause flicker in slow motion footage. Normal lights running on AC (Alternating Current) can fluctuate in brightness as the electricity fluctuates (the 'alternating' in AC). These fluctuations in brightness can affect your footage if the camera is shooting 120fps or faster. The higher the frame rate of the footage the more apparent it is. This can happen regardless of whether you're shooing with a Phantom Flex, Sony FS700U or GoPro HERO3 Black (shoots 240fps).
LED Lights
Most people don't realize that many LED lights have a refresh rate similar to that of a computer monitor. If you're camera isn't in sync with the refresh rate, you'll get rolling bands going through your video.
Archival Footage
If you're restoring older footage, flicker comes from a few sources. 1) The film may have degraded over time, 2) The camera was hand cranked making it difficult to maintain a consistent exposure over the course of the shot, and 3) older lights were more prone to flickering.
If the problem comes from Exposure, which would've been in the original, then it's a similar problem to time lapse. It effects the whole frame and should be easy for Flicker Free to fix. It'll look better than it ever did!
Flicker Free 1.1:
Bug fixes, support for Adobe CC 2015,
improved support for 4K in FCP X
Compatibility:
- Windows
- After Effects CS3 and up.
- Premiere Pro CS4 and up
http://rapidgator.net/file/c558cf4334ff07b265dfdad192da8e04/hotfile-h2nfb.D.A.F.F.1.1.3.C.f.A.E.a.P.P.rar.html
Digital Anarchy Flicker Free 1.1.3 CE for After Effects and Premiere Pro | 11.7 MB
Flicker Free is a powerful new way to deflicker video. It solves an issue that's common for many types of video footage, be it from lights/electricity and cameras being out of sync, time lapse or slow motion (high frame rate) video. The Flicker Free plugin is very effective at removing rolling flicker that occurs with LED & fluorescent lights or computer monitors.
Flicker Free was originally designed to fix the flicker caused by varying exposures in time lapse videography. However, once we developed it, we discovered there are many reasons for flicker and that Flicker Free does a great job on most of them.
As with all Digital Anarchy plugins and products, we strive to create intuitive software that produces exceptional results while remaining dead simple to use. Check out the demo reel below for some great examples and take a look at the Features page to understand how Flicker Free will benefit you!
Presets for an Easy Workflow
They make it easy to get the right settings very quickly, without reading a huge manual. Plugins should just work.
There are several presets for different types of video footage. These are settings we've found to work well in our tests. At best, they'll instantly solve your flicker problems! (this happens a lot... so try one of the presets, it may be all you need to do) Otherwise, they provide a good starting point and you shouldn't need to make too many tweaks. Every piece of video footage is different, of course, but the types of flicker tend to be the same. So the presets usually work quite well.
Easy to Understand
Video plugins should make your life easier. The software should be doing the hard work behind the scenes so you can get work done quickly without watching hours of training videos. Flicker Free is a critical video plugin when you have footage with flicker problems, but hopefully you won't need all the time. It's good to know you can just pull it out of your toolbox and it'll just work. There's no need to re-learn complicated parameters every time you use it.
Analyzes on the Fly
Flicker Free doesn't require any 'pre-analysis' to work. Just apply it to your footage, render a couple seconds as a test and you're ready to render your entire project. It analyzes the frames as it's rendering so you don't have to wait around before you can get to work.
Deflicker Time Lapse Footage
A time lapse video requires taking a photo every 1 second or 1 hour and combining them to make the video. This can result in beautiful videos, but the problem is that the lighting changes. This causes the camera to adjust the exposure and you get flicker. Flicker Free was designed to deal with Time Lapse flicker and works beautifully on it.
Slow Motion Footage
Many lights will cause flicker in slow motion footage. Normal lights running on AC (Alternating Current) can fluctuate in brightness as the electricity fluctuates (the 'alternating' in AC). These fluctuations in brightness can affect your footage if the camera is shooting 120fps or faster. The higher the frame rate of the footage the more apparent it is. This can happen regardless of whether you're shooing with a Phantom Flex, Sony FS700U or GoPro HERO3 Black (shoots 240fps).
LED Lights
Most people don't realize that many LED lights have a refresh rate similar to that of a computer monitor. If you're camera isn't in sync with the refresh rate, you'll get rolling bands going through your video.
Archival Footage
If you're restoring older footage, flicker comes from a few sources. 1) The film may have degraded over time, 2) The camera was hand cranked making it difficult to maintain a consistent exposure over the course of the shot, and 3) older lights were more prone to flickering.
If the problem comes from Exposure, which would've been in the original, then it's a similar problem to time lapse. It effects the whole frame and should be easy for Flicker Free to fix. It'll look better than it ever did!
Flicker Free 1.1:
Bug fixes, support for Adobe CC 2015,
improved support for 4K in FCP X
Compatibility:
- Windows
- After Effects CS3 and up.
- Premiere Pro CS4 and up
http://rapidgator.net/file/c558cf4334ff07b265dfdad192da8e04/hotfile-h2nfb.D.A.F.F.1.1.3.C.f.A.E.a.P.P.rar.html
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