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After Effects Compositing: 4 Color Keying/ with Mark Christiansen.

LinkedIn Learning Available online

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Format:
Video
Author/Creator:
Christiansen, Mark, speaker.
Contributor:
linkedin.com (Firm)
Language:
English
Genre:
Instructional films.
Educational films.
Video recordings.
Physical Description:
1 online resource
polychrome
Place of Publication:
Carpenteria, CA:: linkedin.com, 2014.
System Details:
Latest version of the following browsers: Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Internet Explorer. Adobe Flash Player Plugin. JavaScript and cookies must be enabled. A broadband Internet connection.
Summary:
See how to produce high-quality keys that fit well within their new scenes, while retaining the subtle details that make the results believable, in After Effects.
Color keying, also known as chroma keying, lets you shoot a foreground scene and insert it into virtually any background; this can save you money and allow you to create shots that are impossible or highly dangerous to take as a single shot. For it to be effective, the key is in the details. In this course, Mark Christiansen shows how to produce feature-film-quality keys in After Effects that fit well within their new scenes, while retaining the subtle details?be they strands of hair or soft or translucent edges?that make the results believable. Beginning with a brief explanation of the keying process, Mark takes you through the steps involved in creating a perfect green-screen key: generating a rough matte, eliminating color spill and matte lines, and refining problematic edges. He shows how to work with Keylight and Primatte?two indispensable keying tools in After Effects?and explains when to use one over the other. And for times when green screen won't work, he shows how to generate high-contrast mattes, or luma keys, based on the luminance data in your footage. Last, learn about compression and how to prep a shot for keying.
Participant:
Presenter: Mark Christiansen
Notes:
12/06/20141
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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