The advantage was that FFmpeg (at least as used here) was lossless. I wanted to cut out the center and join the left and right pieces. I hoped that VisiPics, a marvelous free duplicate image identifier, would help me with that (see also duplicate detectors like DoubleKiller). First, there were some individual frames I wanted to delete, and I didn’t want to have to pick them out manually in a video editing program. There were two types of edits that I wanted to perform. This is the tale of that quest - which, as it turned out, was successful, with steps that (once figured out) were somewhat time-consuming but not too hard. It seemed that one way to alleviate those problems, while losing little (if any) quality, would be to convert each of that video’s frames into individual image files, edit them in bulk, and then convert those images back into video. As detailed in another post, it came from a screen capture of a Google Street View route. Speeding Up the Video: Framerate and Narration Later: Attempting to Produce the Video with FFmpeg If you see a path that doesn’t make sense, that may mean I am losing this battle.Ĭreating and Viewing the Individual Images Note: WordPress inexplicably removed all backslashes from this post, and from some others. This post describes how I divided a video into individual images, one per frame edited those images in bulk and then combined them back into a video.
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