From a fairytale forest with a ladybug to a scary lost room - we placed our content creator Fabian inside of two 3D projects our students created.
Chroma keying is a special compositing technique, which allows you to place a real subject into a virtual environment. You might know it from the making-of videos of big hollywood productions, where the actors move in huge rooms that are painted green or blue.
But you don't need a million dollar set to place yourself into your dreamworld for a short clip. For the basics of chroma keying you only need a green wall or cloth, a camera, 1-2 lights and a software for postproduction. In this video we show you how to set up a green screen room and light it properly. Afterwards in the postproduction we compare the editing program
Adobe Premiere with the compositing-only software Nuke - the software our students use here at PIXL VISN.
Many thanks to Justin Brinkmann for assisting Fabian in the Greenscreen Room and to Anna Thevessen, who created the lost room scene and explained to us how she composited the green screen footage in Nuke. Moreover we would like to thank PIXL VISN students Anne-Sophie Menke and Niklas Werthner, who helped out with their knowledge and skills behind the camera.
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Pixl Visn | media arts academy GmbH
Im Mediapark 5
50670 Köln
Email: info@pixlvisn.com
Phone: +49 221 454 4180
Url: www.pixlvisn.com
Handelsregistereintrag: HRB 70791 AG Köln
USt-Ident-Nr.: DE274745653
Geschäftsführer:
Dragos Andrei Stirbu
Robert Ryan Innes
Негізгі бет Green screen and chroma keying - basics you need to know | Premiere Pro vs. Nuke | PIXL VISN
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