Very good. Congratulations. However, you missed one very important detail. The yellow light from the sky and the image generated in photoshop does not correspond to the light reflected on the woman. But nothing that a few adjustments can't solve.
why so complicated? 1. Track Fototage (3d Tracker) 2. Create a null object to the Position where u want to. 3. make screenshot from video - (Export Frame where u want to) 4. Import to Photoshop, 5. Mask the Area u want to replace. 6. Export the new Layer as PNG (from Generative Fill u need to Cutout the Layer first) 7. Import to After effects and Set Layer to Null object. BOOM u r done.. Further Step - Make Rotoscope around the Subject, IF U want to ;-) U r Welcome - Follow for more (Y)
Thanks for your comment - this video is featuring Firefly structural reference, so a little different from the steps you laid out. Also helps to see visuals Thanks for watching
Yes you are correct, Photoshop has implemented much of Firefly in their application, although some features are still not available like the styles as well as the structural reference. Also if you don't own photoshop, firefly is free to use with an adobe account (with certain restrictions)
Great as always! Can you please explain when do we need to choose Align surface? If you can give two examples of when it's necessary andwhen it's not it would be great. That's something I still don't get in Mocha. Thanks
In Mocha, "Align Surface" expands the layer surface (your element) to match the dimensions of the video footage at the current frame. This essentially creates a new virtual plane that aligns with the background surface. Think of it like stretching a flat sheet of paper to perfectly match a slanted wall - the paper becomes your new "canvas" for placing elements. I use it mostly all the time with anything im doing a corner pin tracker as i want those corners to match up with my compositions (which are usually pre-comp'ed prior to tracking, so everything matches up) One instance I suppose you wouldn't use the "align surface" if you were using it to create a tracked mask to bring into after effects with tracking data. Sorry for the long response, hope this helps!