I\'m trying to add overlays to an input video with ffmpeg that appear some time after the video starts.
The basic way to add an overlay is:
ffmpeg -i
Expanding on arttronics' insightful, but speculative answer, video can indeed be easily be overlaid offset using the -itsoffset
flag.
The -itsoffset flag works like so:
-itsoffset offset (input)
Set the input time offset in seconds. [-]hh:mm:ss[.xxx] syntax is also supported. The offset is added to the timestamps of the input files. Specifying a positive offset means that the corresponding streams are delayed by offset seconds.
(NB: Despite the phrase "input files", the flag actually applies only to the input immediately following it. Note also this bug about offsets not applying to audio streams. H/T attronics.)
So overlaying with an offset is as simple as:
ffmpeg -i bg.avi -itsoffset 2 -i over.avi -filter_complex overlay out.avi
This works regardless of the container type.
According to the limited FFmpeg overlay documentation, the process expects that both videos have the same timestamp
(e.g., 0:00:00:00) value to keep things in sync, and warns if not done then the avi.out
will have an unwanted offset from the overlay.avi
video file used.
However, you can use that that fact and take advantage of it!
It's then conceivable that if the overlay.avi
video has a starting timestamp
with the desired offset which is required on the in.avi
input video, then the overlay.avi
video will fire at that same timestamp
(provided by in.avi
) to create the expected outcome for the out.avi
video.
The only bad news is the .avi
container doesn't have timestamps, unlike .mp4
or .mkv
file formats that do. You will have to switch to a file format that supports *timestamps*
for this to work (e.g., overlay.mp4
or overlay.mkv
) for creating the final output video file required.