![]() ![]() There is no holy grail correction applied. The spikes seem to be the exact edited images from Lightroom in terms of luminance. Quote: Saved the metadata on the 4 keyframes, reloaded in LRT and then the spikes showed up. Normally you will apply the "Auto Transition" before (!) activating the Visual Previews - the auto transition will connect the inbetween images and then you won't get spikes. And when reloading in LRT, it's normal, that the keyframes change. Trying to use visual deflicker will fix it 90% but these spikes affect the overall pattern of luminance and give me a very wavy sequence which I can't use.Īfter saving the keyframes in Lightroom, the only images that get altered are the keyframes. I have tried both regular edits and light edits but this still sometimes happens. These spikes don't correspond to keyframes or changes in settings. Sometimes when I add the holy grail edits and then reload the other edited keyframe images from Lightroom back to LRT, I will get random spikes all along the purple luminance curve. That's one reason to shoot with very small adjustments of 1/3 f-stops - in your case they seem to have been much bigger (1 f-stop I assume). Generaly the smaller the Holy Grail Adjustments that you did on your camera, the smaller the holy grail compensations have to be and the less they will affect your brightness. Just use the Exposure slider to define your desired brightness. But that's no problem, you will compensate for them when editing the keyframes. It's normal, that the brightness of the keyframes changes a bit after applying the holy grail compensations - that's why it's advised to rotate the curve as close to the middle line as possible, this will make the changes small, but of course still there are some change. As you can see the 4 keyframes I set don't correspond to any exposure jumps so not really sure what I'm doing wrong. I have tried rotating and stretching the curve but cannot find a working set up. Even though the exposure of all the images was OK in Lightroom, when the holy grail curve is added, the luminance/exposure of the entire sequence goes much too bright. I edit my 4 keyframed images in Lightroom to my liking and then reload them to LR Timelapse. I then set the holy grail keyframes as seen in the attached image. In the timelapse I'm currently working on I have set 4 manual keyframes. Let me know if you need any more information from me. I mainly edit using the basic panel, tone curve, HSL, split toning, detail, lens corrections and calibration panels. I have avoided using clarity or dehaze. I have not altered the gradient/radial filters in any way. Trying to use visual deflicker will fix it 90% but these spikes affect the overall pattern of luminance and give me a very wavy sequence which I can't use. As you can see the 4 keyframes I set don't correspond to any exposure jumps so not really sure what I'm doing wrong.Ģ. Set my initial keyframes, select the holy grail wizard, save, make my edits in Lightroom, return and reload my XMP data and then auto transition and visual preview. I think I'm following the correct method. I've recently been toying with the Holy Grail method but have encountered some issues on every one I've tried so far. I absolutely love LRTimelapse and how easy it makes timelapses now. This post was last modified:, 01:28 by gavinsheehan. ![]()
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