{"account":{"acct":"brozek","avatar":"https://cdn.fosstodon.org/accounts/avatars/108/219/415/927/856/966/original/bae9f46f23936e79.jpg","display_name":"Brandon Rozek","header":"https://fosstodon.org/headers/original/missing.png","id":"108219415927856966","uri":"https://fosstodon.org/users/brozek","url":"https://fosstodon.org/@brozek","username":"brozek"},"application":{"name":"Tusky","website":"https://tusky.app"},"card":{"author_name":"","author_url":"","blurhash":null,"description":"Original 2012-11-16, Updated 2016-04-05: cleanup and information about overlaying images.When using ffmpeg to compress a video, I recommend using the libx264...","embed_url":"","height":0,"html":"","image":null,"image_description":"","language":null,"provider_name":"","provider_url":"","published_at":null,"title":"Using ffmpeg to convert a set of images into a video","type":"link","url":"https://hamelot.io/visualization/using-ffmpeg-to-convert-a-set-of-images-into-a-video/","width":0},"content":"
Need to stitch photos together into a video? Love FFMPEG? Hammad wrote a great post on his blog to do just that. In fact, he even includes a snippet for overlaying audio which is great for slideshows.
https://hamelot.io/visualization/using-ffmpeg-to-convert-a-set-of-images-into-a-video/