There's a discrepancy between the size of the preview image (large if from a DSLR), and the onionskin image (small). So the old, onionskinned image ends up in the corner of the main preview pane. There was also an issue with the onionskin slowing the refresh rate down more than it needed to, although I don't remember the reason.
You're right, though. Timeline management would be important. I would love to see a full featured, open source stop motion program that could handle DSLR input. Entangle is very close, I think. On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 8:14 AM, Manuel Quiñones <ma...@laptop.org> wrote: > 2013/10/31 Paul Archer <p...@paularcher.org>: > > > > > > > >> 1. Entangle as library for Stop Motion app (Manuel Qui?ones) > >> > >> Hi, > >> > >> I wonder how finished are the GObject introspection bindings for > >> Entangle. I would like to use its backend to create a free software > >> stopmotion app. Or do you think it would be better to use libgphoto2 > >> directly? > >> > >> I saw this stopmotion app http://sourceforge.net/projects/smcapture/ > >> but couldn't compile it in a recent Fedora 19. Its development seems > >> stalled. > >> > >> > > Entangle is actually very close to being a usable stop motion app as it > is. > > It has onion skinning; it just needs some work, as it's not scaling > > correctly yet. There has been some discussion on the mailing list about > it. > > That's great news, Paul. Onion skinning is the most elemental feature > for stop motion, so is great to know that Entangle devs are already > into it. > > What do you mean by "scaling correctly"? Anything I can help with? > > A full featured stop motion app would also need a good timeline > management and the ability to reshot. That's why I was considering a > new UI or a plugin. > > -- > .. manuq .. >
_______________________________________________ Entangle-devel mailing list Entangle-devel@gna.org https://mail.gna.org/listinfo/entangle-devel