

In our birthday party example, for instance, if someone or some object moves into the mask at some point then it'll also be partly rendered, ruining the effect.Īnd also the program is, well, less than intuitive. The mask needs to contain your movement action and nothing else, for instance. Problems? This won't work with all videos. The program then renders and plays the cliplet, and if it all looks good then you can export the results to MP4 or WMV videos. Then you get to decide how that movement will be treated - whether it loops, where it appears in the overall clip, and so on.

Next, you're able to choose the background frame which will become the still part of the cliplet.Ī quick freehand drawing around the area you'd like to remain moving - your daughter in the party, the fountain in Rome - is enough to create a mask. How does it work? You must first import your video, and choose a ten second (or less) section containing the moment you'd like to highlight. So you might have a view of a fountain in the square, say: people passing by are frozen, motionless, but the water still cascades down just as it always did. Again, maybe there's a lot of movement as you focus on many different things, but Cliplets can help you zoom in. Or there's that holiday movie you took, in Rome.

Pass it through Cliplets, though, and you may be able to create something where the background is entirely still, the guests all motionless, and all you have is your daughter blowing out a candle, then smiling at the camera. Imagine a video of your daughter's fifth birthday, for instance: shaky camera work, lots of movement, it's all a little messy. Microsoft's Research Cliplets is an interesting tool which enables you to extract one precious moment from a video, and focus specifically on that, producing something that's not quite a still, not really a video, but something in between.
