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dust and scratch removal pluginPosted by di_basa
Cheaper:
[www.chv-plugins.com] Kevin Monahan Social Support Lead, DV Products Adobe Adobe After Effects Adobe Premiere Pro Adobe After Effects and Premiere Pro Community Blog Follow Me on Twitter!
thanx,
I'm trying the CHV-plugins out right now since I don't use AE. Although one can't work on individual scratches/dust, CHV repair collection seems to do a fairly good job, theoretically. After loading 3 plugs onto a sequence, FCP crashes after saying that it needs 13 hours for rendering a 20 sec clip in SD uncompressed... (OS 10.5.2, FCP 6.0.2, 8core-2.8 Gig) Wonder if that's ok... up to 2 will work fine. Kevin, do you use CHV? Thomas
well I've testes around with CHV "The Repair Collection" for a couple of hours.
Those who are interested in my findings: the plugins are tweakable, although you can work only on the entire image, not on artifacts separately. I think for SD- DVD work as an endproduct, they are entirely sufficient. Besides this, loading two dirt removal plugs, one working on white spots, the other on black spots, will make my mac crash...every time, also during export not just render. There are workarounds, involving exporting with the white spots plugin as SCQT, then applying the black spots plugin on a new sequence containing the exported SCQT, but I don't think money is payable for a product that crashes itself.. Any other suggestions for plugins besides CHV and Redgiantsoftware? I am aware that PFClean is a really serious piece of software that costs 10000 + Euros, while CHV wants 99 bucks Thanx
I use FilmFix plugins.
It works, but is a hell of a job (we got a lot to do). That is why i wrote a few apps to help me. (check my site for those) First one, ReCut. In order to have the plugins work right, you need separate shots to feed AE. Next, be prepared to do a lot of manual checking / fixing as well. We normally first run everything trough the Flicker Fixer, that does a tremendous good job, as long as objects are not moving close in front of the camera... Then we use the dirt removal. It takes a long time to tweak the settings for good results, and it highly depends on the amount of motion in the shot. Using good settings, i have rendertimes of 1 to 150 on a quad core 3ghz (windows) That's right, 150 seconds per second output... After that, me manually clean certain frames using Photoshop and a rotoscope tool we've developed. (also available on my site, but windows only at the moment) Don't hesitate to ask me any specific questions you might have. I'm working on a bigger detailed piece on our workflow, but that'll take a few more weeks.... Bouke www.videotoolshed.com bouke@videotoolshed.com
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