Wed May 17, 2023 12:57 pm
As Bruce suggested, above, you can also use the stabilizer on the color page - use the 'Classic Stabilizer' from the 3-dot menu and then select 'Point Tracker' from the drop-list. Leave only pan and tilt checked (top of panel). Add a tracking point (lower-left of panel) and move it to the point you wish to keep motionless. Track forward and back (double-arrows) and after the tracking is completed, click on the 'Stabilize' button. Since 'Zoom' (at the bottom of the panel) is checked by default, the image will zoom in to hide the exposed borders.
Tried this on a subject walking toward the camera, using her dominant eye as the tracking point - looked great. Using Fusion is slower, but I would definitely use it if the tracking plane was more complex than a single point.
Cheers
aka Barkinmadd
Resolve Studio 19.0b3 | Fusion Studio 19.0b3 | Win 11 Pro (22H2) | i9-7940x, P4000 (536.96, 8GB VRAM), 64GB RAM, M.2 boot, SSD scratch, RAID10 data | (laptop) 16" MacBook Pro M1 MAX, 32 GPU cores, 64 GB RAM, 2 TB SSD, Sonoma 14.5