Flicker Free is a powerful and simple way to remove flicker from your video. We offer presets for different types of footage, making it easy to eliminate flicker caused by out of sync cameras, time-lapse, or slow-motion video. Flicker Free will work on any sized footage and is compatible with a wide range of video editing applications such as After Effects, Premiere Pro, FCP, Avid, Resolve, and Vegas.

Flicker Free was originally designed for de-flickering Time-Lapse, but it works amazingly well on many other types of flicker. The most common problem is cameras and lights being out of sync resulting in rolling bands. However, it works on flicker from LED or Fluorescent lights, Slow Motion (high speed) footage, Drone footage, and much more. Check our tutorials for removing the different types of flicker.


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Problems finding the right de-flickering settings? Send a sample of your annoying flicker to our tech support team at sales@digitalanarchy.com . Press reviews for The Light Wrap Fantastic Light Wrap Fantastic on ProVideoCoalition.com

The Light Wrap Fantastic is a brand new plugin! so, we're looking for gallery footage! Do you have some awesome composited footage that LWF really helped you out on? We'd love to see it and give you a hat tip! Email sales@digitalanarchy.com with a link to your video clip. 

 

In the meantime, we'll show you a couple of the videos we put together. Of course, you've probably seen those elsewhere on the site, but we gotta put SOMETHING here. (hint: help us out and send us something!)

The Light Wrap Fantastic plugin is easy to use. You almost don't need tutorials to use this video effects software! It's always good to see how you can push software to perform even better than we imagined, so read on.

The two minute reel is a quick intro to the plugin. It's mixture of different types of blue and green screen footage and breaks down how it's used. Also keep in mind that The Light Wrap Fantastic can be used on footage that has been rotoscoped. Any keyed or masked footage will work great with Light Wrap Fantastic. 

 

This will quickly show you how powerful light wrap is for making incredible composites.

The solution is to take the masked layer and 'pre-comp' it. You create a sequence that has the masked layer inside of it and apply the plugin to the sequence. The way Light Wrap Fantastic will see the alpha channel and create the effect appropriately.

The crosshatch lines that appear are the demo watermark. The plugin is fully functional and you should easily be able to see how effective the Light Wrap Fantastic is. However, you'll need to purchase it to permanently remove the watermark.

Our de-flickering plugin is now GPU accelerated for faster render speeds! Flicker Free 2.0 fixes footage with lots of movement or moving subjects. Motion Compensation and Detect Motion make it possible to repair footage that was previously unfixable!

The Flicker Free video plugin is a powerful new way of dealing with flickering video. It solves an issue that's common to anyone that does time lapse or shoots slow motion (high frame rate) video. With the Flicker Free video plugin you can easily deflicker any type of video. The flicker removal plugin is quick, easy, and produces remarkable results.

Digital Anarchy has developed a plugin called Flicker Free. Working with FCP, Premiere Pro and After Effects (among others) it very effectively removes flicker from time lapses, slow motion and refresh rate phasing (LED lighting and monitor screens).

Time-lapse is a widely used filmmaking technique. It was first made popular during the video DSLR movement and since then a multitude of accessories and software support to improve the workflow has been developed. One aspect of these is flicker reduction software, smoothing out exposure shifts over a long period of time.

LED and monitor screen flicker modulate and band. Slow motion can also, stem from light sources and can be a lot more prominent than exposure shifts within time lapses. For these reasons, the same flicker reduction tools have not always been effective. Where these time lapse-specific flicker reduction tools fall short, is where Flicker Free steps in.

Philip Bloom made a tutorial on a DIY method for slow-motion flicker removal. This is only effective with certain types of slow-motion flicker, where the conflicting light source is strictly on/off (no modulating). Opacity blending frames can also create a kind of motion blur, so the technique is not always effective.

The plugin by Digital Anarchy is quick and simple to use, working seamlessly with your parent NLE system. It contains a few presets including time-lapse, slow-mo and a few different types of LED lights and monitor screens. It then has a few parameters including sensitivity, threshold, time radius, and ability to analyze channels independently/together. I strongly recommend checking out the instruction manual found here for explanations of how each parameter affects your outcome.

I'm having the same flickering on iPhone -- even with the preventDefault and return false options of canceling the default click event. It appears that on the device it tries to go back to the top of the page before scrolling. If you have both a scrollTop and scrollLeft animation going on it really gets buggy. It's jQuery's issue.. I've seen a scrolling method with mootools that doesn't have this issue. See this page:

Thanks for making a very cool plug-in!

This makes creating and manipulating a nice looking flicker effect very quick and easy. However, I have 2 important questions:


1) Is there a way to see the dimmer value of the light running the effect?

In the picture below I have Dim 1 running a normal phaser effect, while Dim 2 & Dim 3 are running your MyFlicker plugin. The white square in the far left column and the orange dimmer bar in the Dim column depict the light flickering away, but since no actual values are shown, I am unable to tell what the actual levels are. (e.g.: My gaffer might ask me what are the High and Low values for Dim 2, and I won't be able to tell him)


2) Is there a way to adjust the existing parameters of a light running your plugin?

As far as I can tell (and I may be missing something), I cannot seem to view or edit the existing parameters of a light running the plugin. I can certainly select the light and run your plugin again, but that will snap the values of each parameter to whatever they were the last time I used the plugin, and NOT to what the light was actually running before.

Example: I have light in Dim 3 that's very close to the actor's face, just out of frame. I use MyFlicker to give it a nice subtle 5-10% flicker.

Then I've got a light in Dim 2 shining against a background wall, and need a much brighter flicker, so I select that light and use MyFlicker and adjust the settings to give it a bright 90-100% flicker. 

Now I need to go back and adjust the parameters of Dim 3. If I select that light and hit MyFlicker, the light will slam to 90-100% and blind the actor, since those were the parameters last time I used the plugin. Is there any way around this?

I think the solution here is to store your flicker to a preset before storing it to the cue. That way you can go back to the preset when you want to edit, as opposed to recreating the flicker, which is what you're doing when you call the plugin a second time.

Thanks for the quick update Andreas 


jfarrow Sure I can save the generated 64-step phaser effect to a preset, but editing that phaser to adjust something equivalent to what was once the High or Low value is a pain. A lot of gaffers I've worked for like to have very specific and granular control over the effect, such as: "let's see a flicker between 30-50%, okay bring the top end down to 45%, alright let's try bringing up the bottom to 35%" and so on...

Having to dive into the phaser editor and manually grab all the highest points in the graph and try to drag them downwards a couple points is not efficient.


I've worked on period films and projects that are lit entirely by candlelight/lanterns/etc, so I may have a couple hundreds lights in a scene all running some variation of a flicker, and I need the console to allow me to tweak those settings for each light on the fly.

There is nothing worse than having nasty flicker on your images, and I think a lot of people are unaware that there are ways of reducing it, or in a lot of cases getting rid of it entirely. Flicker Free from Digital Anarchy was originally designed for de-flickering time-lapse shots, but the company actually found it worked really well for getting rid of flicker that occurs in many other forms.

Sensitivity 

This affects how much of the image Flicker Free is looking at. Usually set this between 10 and 30. If the flicker is affecting the whole frame, higher values are required. For smaller areas, set to a low value.

As I mentioned earlier, flicker can occur from a wide array of shooting scenarios. Flicker is sometimes very obvious and easy to see, but if you happen to be shooting in say 25p 1/50th shutter in a country that is 60Hz, you can get flicker in your images that is not evident on your monitor or viewfinder at the time of shooting. Flicker Free can get rid of this very easily.

A time-lapse video requires taking a photo or a video frame at set intervals (eg. 1 sec., 10sec. 1min etc) and combining them to make a video. The biggest problem with doing this is that the exposure tends to change between frames. When played back this exposure change shows up as a kind of flicker in your final result. 2351a5e196

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