Hello my friend, Can you please help me and tell me how to make a positive effect? here in this video at 0:10 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-eCv6XkO1EPg.html or here ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-BI-XT_DnYHo.html Maybe you could please make a tutorial on how to do such an effect. Thanks in advance
@@aaronme6539 Wow! I believe he actually masked it out by hand. Meaning he did not use a green screen suit at all. It is a lot of work to do it the way he did. He probably used mocha AE to track the masks around everything that he made invisible, but then he had to create what was behind things that turned invisible. Like when his hands are invisible, you can see his jacket through them. Maybe I will play with it and see what kind of tutorial could be done. He remained pretty still, so that his masks wouldn't have to move very much. Again, there is no easy and quick way to do that, it would take some time. Thanks for showing me. :)
Great video.. I know I've watched too much Film Riot when I can't hear Turbulent Displacement without waiting for a short clip of the song. Some great tips. I would mention that it's best to block all natural light and use consistent artificial light unless you can do the clean plate and acting within a few minute timeframe.. even within an hour the color temperature and direction can change and mess up the shots, making it much harder to match. One advantage to having a really high resolution camera could be to film extra wide and zoom in and create some camera movement to eliminate that locked off look and make it more impressive.
The ghost effect can be done without a suit just by filming yourself over a green screen background then changing the footage of you to green with a filter after removing the background layer. now that your footage is hollow it's all about proper background animation layering. making stuff float like you are using the force is pretty cool though so i might have to buy one of those.
I was playing with my space ship models and I was wondering if anyone had done that with a green suit. I guess they might look a little shaky but man can I land a ship in a cool-ass way, by hand, on my desk. Sometimes I even land erasers. Maybe I'll try this for the heck of it.
Dude, that's an awesome idea! I hadn't actually though of that! I have some new tutorials about green screen suit stuff coming up, and I think I need to include that effect.
@Chez Pierre! Dude! That was great! A lot of hilarious ideas! On the picture with the M.C. Escher drawing with the crazy stairs, it might be cool to rotate some of the images of you to be standing sidways or even upside down. Just an idea. You are a very creative guy!
Considering all the cleanup work necessary, I'd probably just do a lot of these without the green screen suit. Or use it just so I could easily tell what I need to paint out.
When I plan the shot well and not have shadows behind the suit, I didn't have very much clean up at all. Every shot is different though and requires planning. ..
Thanks, If you want to see a little more of how I did some of these clips, you can check out this follow up video. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-b2m1c3Kt_nY.html
If muslin fabric is one of the best ways to build a green screen, then what material is best for a green suit? Muslin is not stretchy, and therefore anything as such will cast shadows due to the overabundance of wrinkles. So, is it a form of Lycra that works best? I’ve not been able to find out what a chromakey suit is made of. Thanks :)
The ones I have say that they are spandex. They are stretchy and do not wrinkle very much at all when they are on. Here is a link to the ones I've been using. amzn.to/37xA7Sg
For the electricity effect, and outlining the body, the green screen suit is pretty handy too, but yeah, you can use rotobrush 2.0 to do some of these effects also.
That is a challenge , getting as even lighting as possible when you film is important, and sometimes doing two or three instances of green screen effect can help. So you key out the bright green, then you Key out the shadow green With another pass. I will try to make a new video specifically about keying out the green screen suit. Especially in difficult conditions.
I don't have a PC. Doing 3D Animation but also want to add my mini version body in video like a side character or something. After doing my examinations. I'll buy a PC and again watch the video with new perspective.
You probably just need a green screen then, you wouldn't need the green screen suit for that. Or you might be able to use Rotobrush 2.0 in after effects. I checked out your videos, Very Cool! I didn't know about using Prisma 3d.
I made sure my face never went behind the puppet and just masked it out. I was careful to make sure any part of myself that moved near or behind the puppet was covered with green. If you don't understand what I mean, I can put a picture up that might explain better. just let me know.
Might be a bit too late, but curious how film studios remove a limb in a moving scene? It's not likely they film a moving scene to make their background before they let the actor do the actual shot... So how is it done?
Actually, sometimes they do film a moving scene to create the background! Those are called motion controlled shots, where the camera is programmed to duplicate a move exactly the same, over and over. But there are other methods to remove limbs in moving shots. Mostly it's done with digital VFX and a new background is created. There are several methods, and it depends on the shot as to which one you would use. But things are certainly more complex to digitally remove a limb for a moving camera shot.
here are some links - Green Screen Suit on Amazon $29.99 at time of this video - amzn.to/37xA7Sg Green Screen Hood $9.99 - amzn.to/2KlRRHr Green screen long gloves $11.97 - amzn.to/3h8dcQK
What about, for example, a gymnast wearing a green screen suit, and twirling a gymnastics ribbon? Sometimes the ribbon may go behind part of the green screen suit. Is there a way to correct for that in the editing?
Cool stuff, just recently got a puppet and now I want a green suit. Question: I've been wanting to try the portal vfx thing, is it as easy as wearing the green suit and having the puppet come thru the portal as if he's levitating? The idea just popped in my head n sounded cool 😎
You could do it like that. Get shot where the green screen suit is keyed out, where you can only see the puppet walking forward, then composite together with a portal effect. Might be pretty cool!
Floyd Erryck, I try to teach everything in simple steps, even if it's a complex effect. so learn away, and you can always ask questions if they come up. Take care!