-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 225
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Single pixel artefact in resulting video #56
Comments
Thanks for bringing this to my attention. If you happen to have an input image where this artifact occurs I would be grateful if you could share it with me so I can debug this. The images on the website aren't the originals that were used when creating the effect (they are probably preprocessed to make them fit on the website). |
Hey sniklaus, thanks for responding. I've been able to spot the pixel in every image I've processed including the doublestrike.jpg image included in the repo. You can see it on the right hand side railing at the top of the stairs of this image. On the doublestrike image here is a side by side of two frames showing the pixel in the resulting video |
hi, guys, |
I fixed it by updating the script to allow you to create videos of arbitrary size. The larger the output video, the smaller the pixel. |
这是来自QQ邮箱的假期自动回复邮件。 您好,我最近正在休假中,无法亲自回复您的邮件。我将在假期结束后,尽快给您回复。
|
Hi Team,
Awesome work!
There is a single pixel artefact that moves in a way that looks relative to the acceleration of the viewport. It looks like it could be that the pixel at the origin of the viewport is set to 0 or very high or something.
You can see it in most of the videos created with the tool, but I am sure it is there in all of them.
In this waxy article
https://waxy.org/2019/11/turning-photos-into-2-5d-parallax-animations-with-machine-learning/
You can spot it on bottom left corner of the dress of the kissing in time square one.
Bottom of Nixons jacket in Elvis + Nixon
Gordon Sondlands left hand
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: