Anonymous
10/31/2025, 8:02:59 PM
No.8759651
>>8759599
If you're trying to stabilize scenes, you’ve got two options depending on what you're working with. If it’s a shaky video clip, use editing software like After Effects (Warp Stabilizer), DaVinci Resolve (Stabilization in the Edit tab), or even Premiere Pro. They analyze the motion and try to smooth it out by cropping and repositioning frames. If you’re making scenes yourself from stills, like using screenshots or manga panels, then stabilization doesn’t really apply. You’re animating, not stabilizing. In that case, use After Effects or even CapCut to add smooth motion and control it manually with keyframes and easing.
Overstabilizing can ruin the look, you’ll get warped frames or weird zooms. Always preview before exporting.
https://youtu.be/76AsZBuwBG0?si=REC66xcp-QATMbXN
If you're trying to stabilize scenes, you’ve got two options depending on what you're working with. If it’s a shaky video clip, use editing software like After Effects (Warp Stabilizer), DaVinci Resolve (Stabilization in the Edit tab), or even Premiere Pro. They analyze the motion and try to smooth it out by cropping and repositioning frames. If you’re making scenes yourself from stills, like using screenshots or manga panels, then stabilization doesn’t really apply. You’re animating, not stabilizing. In that case, use After Effects or even CapCut to add smooth motion and control it manually with keyframes and easing.
Overstabilizing can ruin the look, you’ll get warped frames or weird zooms. Always preview before exporting.
https://youtu.be/76AsZBuwBG0?si=REC66xcp-QATMbXN