Beta · Edging Similarity live

AI ski video analysis from a short video clip

Upload a clear ski clip — your first 3 analyses are free — and Poser turns it into replay views, turn breakdowns, and objective technique feedback, starting with Edging Similarity, a score for how well your skis build edge together.

Drop your ski video here

Best with 10–20 seconds, skier large in frame.
  • 3 free clips
  • No sensors
  • Works from phone video
Your result Edging Similarity
Ski video analysis result with skeleton overlay and 91 Edging Similarity score
Skeleton overlay
Edging Similarity 91 / 100
Right
Left
Right
Left
Right
Left
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Left
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Left
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Best 6-turn window

Best 6-turn window scores 91. The opening linked turns build edge together across both sides; later right turns are the review moments.

Replay views

Head-tracked and skeleton-overlay videos make fast ski footage easier to inspect.

Technique metrics

Turn-by-turn scores reveal patterns across left and right turns.

Plain-English feedback

Poser explains what the movement might mean and where to look in the replay.

What Poser does

Ski technique feedback from the video you already have

Poser analyzes short ski clips to make your movement easier to understand. Instead of watching a shaky phone video over and over, you get stabilized replay views, skeleton overlays, turn timing, and technique metrics that highlight patterns in your skiing.

You do not need boot sensors, special hardware, or a coached session. Upload a clear clip from your phone, choose the skier to track if needed, and Poser creates analysis outputs you can review frame by frame.

01

Upload a short clip

Best results come from 10–20 seconds with several linked turns.

02

Poser tracks the skier

The system finds the primary skier and follows the skier through the video, even when the camera moves or other skiers are in the frame.

03

Review the analysis

Watch replay views, compare turns, and inspect your first technique score.

Live now First Poser score

Your first Poser score: Edging Similarity

Edging Similarity measures how well your inside ski and outside ski build edge together as a turn develops. A higher score means both skis are tipping and building edge in a more coordinated pattern. A lower score is a prompt to inspect whether the inside ski is staying flat, joining late, or moving differently from the outside ski.

01 · Pose & lower-leg overlay
Skeleton overlay highlighting the skier's lower legs and skis during a turn
Lower legs tracked
Poser watches how each ski tips onto edge through the turn.
02 · Turn-by-turn scores
100
75
50
25
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
R
L
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Best 6-turn window
03 · What it suggests
Inspect

The overall score is high. Later right turns are still worth inspecting because they break the otherwise consistent edge-build pattern.

Edge angle relationship Edge-build rate Timing lag Inside-ski delay
A high score is not about both skis carrying equal pressure — it is about how together they build edge.
A lower score is not always a mistake. It is a prompt to look closer at one part of the turn.
Terrain, snow, turn type, and camera angle all affect how a score should be read.
Treat Edging Similarity as one signal among the replay views, not a verdict.
Symmetry

Compare your left and right turns

Most skiers are not perfectly symmetrical. Poser splits a run into turns so you can compare timing, rhythm, and technique patterns from one side to the other. This makes it easier to see whether an issue repeats every turn, only appears on one side, or shows up when the terrain changes.

L 2.1s
R 1.0s
L 1.1s
R 0.9s
L 1.1s
R 1.0s
L 1.1s
R 1.5s
17
detected turns
59
turns per minute
+0.1s
right turns, median
91
best 6-turn score

Left and right turn timing is close, and the best 6-turn window stays very consistent across both sides.

Example output

See what Poser gives back

Raw clip

The raw ski video

The clip before the replay outputs: camera motion, changing skier distance, and normal phone-video framing.

Head-tracked

Skier centered so movement is easier to compare

Poser locks onto the skier and keeps them centered, so you can watch body position turn after turn without the camera pulling your eye away.

Skeleton overlay

Body alignment drawn on the skier

A pose skeleton tracks shoulders, hips, knees, and skis — making stance, angulation, and the edge-build of each leg easier to inspect frame by frame.

66 R
99 L
100 R
88 L
95 R
97 L
93 R
97 L
94 R
90 L
86 R
Left and Right turns Edging Similarity · 91 / 100

Left/right turns and Edging Similarity score

Each detected turn gets a score, split by side. Patterns that you would never spot at full speed become obvious across the run.

This skier has a strong best 6-turn window. The later right turns are the useful review moment: check whether the inside ski joins the edge build a little later after transition.

Plain-English explanation of one pattern

No jargon wall. Poser points to one clear thing to look at, and tells you which part of the replay to watch.

How it works

From ski clip to technique feedback

1

Upload your clip

Choose a short ski video clip from your phone or camera.

2

Primary skier auto-detected

Even if there are multiple people in frame, Poser finds and tracks the right skier.

3

Poser analyzes the movement

The system tracks the skier, estimates body pose, detects turns, and calculates technique metrics.

4

Review your results

Watch replay outputs, compare turns, and inspect the score.

The roadmap

Built around the skills that matter in skiing

Poser is being built around four core elements of ski technique: edging, balance (body position), pressure, and steering (rotary). The first live metric is Edging Similarity. More turn-level metrics will build toward a broader SkiRank score over time.

Live

Edging

How your skis build edge through the turn.

Live now: Edging Similarity.
Coming

Balance

How your body moves over your feet and through transition.

Coming as pose and turn analysis improves.
Coming

Pressure

How movement timing suggests pressure build, release, and turn shaping.

Coming as pose and turn analysis improves.
Coming

Steering

How smoothly and consistently the skis change direction.

Coming as pose and turn analysis improves.
Free to start

Start with 3 free ski clips

Try Poser with your own skiing before paying for anything. The free plan includes 3 clips, replay views, skeleton overlays, turn analysis, Edging Similarity scoring, and downloadable MP4 outputs.

Free

Start here
$0 · 3 clips

Everything you need to analyze your own skiing and decide if Poser is for you.

  • 3 free clips
  • Head-tracked replay
  • Skeleton overlay views
  • Turn analysis
  • Edging Similarity score
  • Download MP4 outputs
Upload your first free clip

Trip Pack

One-time
+5 clips

Good for a ski trip or a focused training block. One-time payment, no subscription.

  • 5 more clips
  • Everything in Free
  • One-time payment
See pricing
Filming guide

A better clip gives better feedback

Poser works best when the skier is clear, large in frame, and visible for several linked turns. You do not need a perfect video, but a few simple filming choices make the analysis much more useful.

  • Ski toward the camera.
  • Keep the skier large in frame, use zoom.
  • Avoid backlit silhouettes.
  • Capture at least 6–8 linked turns if possible.
  • Use 60 FPS when available.
  • Upload normal-speed video, not slow motion.
Good ski filming example with skier large and clear in frame
Large & clear
Good clip
Bad ski filming example: skier too small in frame
Too far away
Bad clip
Who it's for

For skiers who want clearer feedback between lessons

Recreational skiers

Understand what your turns look like, not just what they feel like.

Carving-focused skiers

Check whether both skis build edge together through the top of the turn.

Instructors & coaches

Use visual overlays and turn metrics to support technique conversations.

Clubs & training groups

Give skiers a consistent way to review clips after training.

Who's building it

Built by a skier, instructor, and software engineer

Christian Hansen, founder of Poser
“The goal is not to replace coaching — it's to turn real ski clips into clearer replay views, objective movement signals, and better technique conversations.”

Poser is built by Christian Hansen so that any skier with a phone can get objective feedback and feel the joy of improving their skiing.

FAQ

Questions skiers ask

Is Poser free?

Yes. You can start with 3 free clips. Paid packs are only for more clips.

Do I need sensors or special hardware?

No. Poser works from ski video.

Can I upload from my phone?

Yes. Phone video is fine if the skier is clear and large enough in frame.

How long should the clip be?

Aim for 10–20 seconds. Film enough to include at least 6-8 turns.

What does Poser analyze today?

Replay views, skeleton overlays, turn comparison, and the first technique metric: Edging Similarity.

What is Edging Similarity?

It measures how well the inside and outside ski build edge together as the turn develops.

Is Poser a replacement for a ski instructor?

No. Poser helps you inspect movement objectively and identify patterns, but it should support coaching, practice, and your own review.

What if the analysis is wrong?

Video quality, camera angle, snow, terrain, and skier visibility matter. Treat scores as analysis prompts, not final judgments.

Your turn

Try Poser on your own skiing

Upload one clear ski clip and see your replay views, turn breakdown, and Edging Similarity score.

Drop your ski video here

Best with 10–20 seconds, skier large in frame.