Today, since even a smart phone takes photos in a larger resolution than is required for 4K video output, I have decided to future proof my clips by now producing all such videos in 4K.
I will also produce in 1080p as it is more universally shared. Not everyone has embraced 4K.
I believe (Though I've yet to develop the skill to prove it) , that a great time-lapse starts with a great series of photos.
Several have been linked to from this forum in the past - eg Project Yosemite (Google finds it). In such videos, the majority of the jpegs used would stand alone as fantastic single images.
I currently 'Batch' the photos to size (3840x2160), drop them into PD, set each to have a duration of one frame, then hit the start button. Am I missing any tricks here ?
I live in the UK, am I correct in thinking that 4K, H.264/50mbps/25p as mp4 is the best current output ? I could always convert this file to H.265 at a later date if so required - Or am I better going straight to H.265 to keep quality high ?
I confess I have experience with neither MKV (I believe it can carry sub-titles) nor M2TS. I note they can go to 50p, but is 25 fine for timelapse ?
When I produce the 1080p version, I simply leave the project where it is on the time-line, alter the PD output settings and hit start again. Thus I allow PD to re-size the video for me rather than 'Batch' the photos again. Is this correct ? - I'm reasoning that as I'm going far smaller, the quality of the PD output in 'HD' should be fine. Unless someone knows otherwise?
Now, let's say I want to have a fade from one 'clip/sequence' to another... say circa 1 second duration.
I had believed that I would have to take the 25 jpegs involved and produce an alternative set where the fade takes place (Program not PD) and replace those in the time-line...
My thinking being that I would maintain the quality. Naturally it would be easier to produce the first clip - then the second, finally put both side by side in the time-line and let PD put a fade between them.
Would this 'Double' production produce unwanted artifacts, or does it look fine ?
If any experienced time-lapser out there would like to suggest anything else helpful, that would be great !
Gerry