![]() Unlike most point trackers, planar trackers can have part of the track go off screen while continuing to hold their track (a very handy feature). Planar trackers, such as Mocha Pro, use very wide search areas that constantly calculate where the object specified is in relation to the previous and the next frame of video. Point trackers follow one or a couple of points selected by the user within a small search area. Planar tracking is not a single point tracker, which is probably what most editors are used to. What is planar tracking (or what ISN’T planar tracking)? After reading this review go check out the Mocha Fundamentals series of videos. Those will get you started relatively quickly.įor this review of Imagineer Systems’ Mocha Pro 4.1 and Mocha Plus 4.1 I will touch on a few of the latest advances in planar tracking software as well as share some tips that may get you started and working faster. If you haven’t touched a tracker and/or are scared, I don’t blame you it’s not necessarily a painless procedure (especially if you don’t have great source footage), but stick with it because the results of a great track, along with some creative motion graphics creativity, can be mind bending. If you are lucky enough to have been successful in your standard Avid tracker or the amazing Adobe After Effects 3D Camera Solver then you will love what Imagineer System’s is doing with Mocha Pro 4.1 and Mocha Plus 4.1. Most people working in modern post production have heard about “tracking.” Many may have even dabbled in a little tracking to remove a dead pixel, do some simple sign replacements or stabilize a shaky shot. ![]()
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