On 2019-03-13 09:16, Gerardo Ballabio wrote:
For the record, here's the thread on ffmpeg-user mailing list:
http://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-user/2019-March/043677.html
Gerardo
cheers, that's neat that you can import values directly from a .png.
mick
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Key ID4BFEBB31
For the record, here's the thread on ffmpeg-user mailing list:
http://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-user/2019-March/043677.html
Gerardo
Il giorno mer 6 mar 2019 alle ore 11:48 Gerardo Ballabio
ha scritto:
>
> I guess my question was too specific. I'll try asking directly on
> ffmpeg mailing lis
On Wednesday, March 06, 2019 05:48:59 AM Gerardo Ballabio wrote:
> I guess my question was too specific. I'll try asking directly on
> ffmpeg mailing list.
If you get it figured out, I (and probably others) would be interested in how
to do it -- maybe you could post a summary here with a link to
Gerardo Ballabio wrote:
> Hello all,
> I have a video that was filmed under bad lighting conditions, the
> background is too bright and people in the foreground are dark. I'm
> trying to use ffmpeg to correct it. Please kindly help me.
>
You will probably be happiest with a non-linear editor, mo
On 2019-03-06 10:48, Gerardo Ballabio wrote:
I guess my question was too specific. I'll try asking directly on
ffmpeg mailing list.
Thanks
Gerardo
probably best. I've only used ffmpeg to extract frames.
The syntax can be a bit daunting.
What I'd probably do is extract a frame of concern and see
I guess my question was too specific. I'll try asking directly on
ffmpeg mailing list.
Thanks
Gerardo
Il giorno dom 3 mar 2019 alle ore 18:16 Gerardo Ballabio
ha scritto:
>
> Hello all,
> I have a video that was filmed under bad lighting conditions, the
> background is too bright and people in t
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