Here I want to introduce my short movie, shot on the Osmo Pocket 1 that is about my hometown, Denizli, Turkey.
I shot all of them at 4K, then color graded them (time-lapses on Lightroom CC, footages on Davinci Resolve), then edited them again in Davinci Resolve. I exported it as full HD / 30fps.
Hi there MuhlisG, I appreciate the video you have shared and thank you for reaching us out. You got a beautiful video there and the color is so awesome. Keep up the good work! Thank you for your support.
DJI Paladin Posted at 11-11 06:05
Hi there MuhlisG, I appreciate the video you have shared and thank you for reaching us out. You got a beautiful video there and the color is so awesome. Keep up the good work! Thank you for your support.
Thank you for your appreciated thoughts! The Osmo Pocket has great potential, if used properly it can be an amateur (and even a professional's) filmmaking camera.
Montfrooij Posted at 11-12 03:08
PS, I subscribed to your channel via 2 channels .
Mine are http://www.youtube.com/c/tricksandtipsnl
http://www.youtube.com/c/PeterMontfrooij
How did you get the slow moving (star?) trails at the end? Surely not in camera?
Nice question. I made a 5hr timelapse (as photos, in Osmo Pocket), took a photo every 10 seconds of 8-sec exposure. Then I put them into a program named StarStax, which is an image-stacking program. I enabled the comet mode and set it as the long trail setting.
MuhlisG Posted at 11-13 04:57
Nice question. I made a 5hr timelapse (as photos, in Osmo Pocket), took a photo every 10 seconds of 8-sec exposure. Then I put them into a program named StarStax, which is an image-stacking program. I enabled the comet mode and set it as the long trail setting.
Then I combined them in Davinci Resolve.
Sounds like some good pre-planning and a very creative workflow - they result is superb!
Thanks! I was happy to read your thoughts Yeah, it took a lot of time to plan it. I was thinking about what can I shoot on a summer night and tried to do this. At first glance, I was planning to make astrophotography (maybe some milky way) photo by stacking them, then found this function on the StarStax program.