Welcome To VertexTemplates.com 3D Studio Max Tutorials Area - Bluescreen 101 |
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Using Premiere or the standard edition of After Effect.
The goal of this tutorial is to create a moving object/person that can then be pulled from the background and placed into another scene. This is not unlike selecting a part of an image in Photoshop with the Magic Wand tool and pasting the portion onto another picture. The difference with video is that the colour in every frame of your video must be pulled rather than just a single image. While there are great plugins, such as Ultimatte to help you complete professional grade projects, this tutorial will only cover tools that come standard with your Adobe After Effects or Adobe Premiere product. In other words, this is for those who are making their effects on the cheap. This tutorial assumes that you know how to start a New Project in Premiere and a New Composition in After Effects. The Production Bundle is not needed to complete these instructions. You will be introduced to the following concepts and tools: For this tutorial miniDV footage was used and captured using a Firewire/IEEE 1394/iLink connection. You can still complete this tutorial using anologue capture, but you are hoping for the greatest colour consistency and analogue does not always hold up. Final Note: Avoid wearing blue during filming. It will become invisible when compositing. Pre-Filming: Things to think about before filming
Part One: Using Premiere for quick and simple bluescreen
Once the footage is captured to the computer, import the video into Premiere and drag it onto the timeline. Video 2 track or above must be used to obtain the TRANSPARENCY settings required.
Part Two: After Effects, Color Key, and Masking Using Premiere for bluescreen is a good method for some situations, but really falls apart on others. The problem is that there are bound to be poor lighting conditions on parts of the image, causing unwanted artifacts. Also, some parts of the image being bluescreened are unecessary in the final shot. This is where After Effects can be used to solve the problem. Color Key:
Masks:
The footage is now prepared quite closely to what Premiere was able to do earlier. However, the advantage now is that masks can be created to hide the problem areas that cannot be removed with the Color Key process.
What makes these masks even more powerful is that they are animatable. If desired, a mask could have been drawn around the talent, only the above example had very little movement with the masked off artifacts and animating every time the talent moved would have taken much longer. As a final idea of what you can produce, I have provided an effect created entirely in After Effects. Masks were used for much more than cropping out artifacts, but shows how far these powerful features can be taken in combination with bluescreen techniques.
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