The following captions/subtitles are available by clicking the CC button under the video: - English narration - German narration - Spanish narration - English (+ scientific names) names of the marine life and dive sites - German (+ scientific names) names of the marine life and dive sites - Dutch (+ scientific names) names of the marine life and dive sites Please get in touch if you would like to help with other languages.
It's a deinterlacing script that runs inside AviSynth. If you Google "Vegas RU-vid Vimeo" you'll find my tutorial on my bubblevision website. It's quite complicated to set up a workflow but if you're shooting interlaced footage it gives great results. Also important for this current series was grading the footage with colour curves in Sony Vegas Pro and using Spline36Resize, which is a good resizer, for upsizing to 720p.
Gracias..Es sencillamente maravilloso.. ¡¡Qué Diseñador que es Dios!! Qué Sabiduría y gran Amor por nosotros... qué diseños tan espectaculares, qué colores tan vivos y hermosos, ¡Gracias Padre Creador por darnos esta hermosura para que la admiremos con felicidad, como yo ahora...! Gracias por mostrarnos con qué paz y con qué armonía viven en el mar... hay Amor dentro del mar... pensar que así podemos vivir también nosotros, si nos amamos los unos a otros, espiritualmente, como Jesús pidió.
Whether these fish live in tropical seas...? I want to fishing this fish and petting these fish in my aquarium.... more precisely in the Indonesian sea (javanese sea) 😁😁✌✌
Watch the full 2-hour documentary at: Reef Life of the Andaman (full marine biology documentary) ... Coral reefs, tropical fish, sharks, stingrays, marine life, shipwrecks etc. from Thailand and Burma.
hey bubblevision! what is your favorite puffer? mine is poucupine puffer and a golden puffer. its pretty obvious that im a fish fan. i mean look at my profile picture!
By "puffers" I am referring to the family Tetraodontidae, and by "porcupinefishes" I am referring to the family "Diodontidae". They are different families within the order Tetraodontiformes. They share many similar characteristics and I suppose some might refer to porcupinefishes as "puffers" because of their ability to inflate their bodies with water, like Tetraodontid puffers.
My footage is licensed commercially so I'm afraid the answer is probably 'no'. But thank you for asking. More information at www.bubblevision.com/use.htm