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Expertise

RE:Vision Effects has over 12 years of experience in developing software tools and systems designed to give motion picture and video artists creative freedom. The company has been widely acclaimed because of the in-house know-how in video image processing, 2D and 3D graphics and stereo 3D algorithms.

The company has technical expertise in

  • Image processing techniques and pipelines
  • Automatic motion estimation, including point-tracking and optical flow algorithms
  • Optical flow with user-guidance (constraint-based optical flow)
  • Stabilization
  • Retiming (slow motion and speed ups)
  • Image quality restoration, including noise and grain reduction and smart image enhancement
  • Standards conversion, including frame rate conversion and other related issues
  • De-interlacing techniques
  • Resizing algorithms
  • Video-to-film techniques
  • Interactive and automatic image alignment
  • Warping and morphing
  • Motion blurring automatically using optical flow or using motion vectors from 3D animation systems
  • Texture mapping
  • Stylized rendering, 2D to simulated 3D and particle systems
  • Smart filtering. For example: sharpness and blur processing, while keeping important features intact
  • Multi-view and stereoscopic image processing and editing
  • Depth from stereo
  • Warping 3D objects using motion estimation from live footage
    And many other image and video processing algorithms

We have extensive business acumen and know our customers well, and spend a great deal of time understanding the video and image processing market space as it is now and where it will head in the future.

Of high priority to us is our customer. We have been told we have some of the best tech and sales support in the industry.

We also have extensive post-production experience. We continue to expand our creative expertise by collaborating with several top motion picture effects houses. For example, we have developed one-of-a-kind software that brought paintings to life in the 20th Century Fox movie Night at the Museum 2. Their efforts produced effects where the scenes in paintings on a display wall all come to life at once, and their subjects begin interacting with people in the museum.