Even if you’ve never been guilty of sharing one of those annoying vertical videos, you may have run into a situation where you’ve been filming and moving around at the same time — and because you were scrambling over a rock or playfully wrestling while recording, your fun little video perspective spun vertical on you. Or, if you’re like me, you might have taken a vertical photo — then realized that you had a video-ready moment to capture and started recording video, only to realize that you started recording in upright mode. Once you start, you’re stuck.
Horizon Keeps iPhone Video Shooting on the Level
Posted by: Chris Maxcer January 23, 2014 05:00 AMEven if you’ve never been guilty of sharing one of those annoying vertical videos, you may have run into a situation where you’ve been filming and moving around at the same time — and because you were scrambling over a rock or playfully wrestling while recording, your fun little video perspective spun vertical on you. Or, if you’re like me, you might have taken a vertical photo — then realized that you had a video-ready moment to capture and started recording video, only to realize that you started recording in upright mode. Once you start, you’re stuck.