@@Corn_Pone_Flicks To be honestly, I agree with you now, because I did a lot of shots with Mocha after watching this video. Only some special shots can be matched, but for rotoscoping, it is pretty good.
@@huajunli2494 Was looking for tutorials and this made video it seem way easier than what I'm experiencing right now, even 10 years after this tutorial was made.
you can make a shape, and unlink the shape to its track, this now makes it basically a window that says, "everything in this window will be tracked" it is explained very well in the 2nd half of this video - www.studiodaily.com/2010/10/video-tutorial-learn-advanced-tracking-techniques-in-imagineer-mocha/
@@mpellar If your youtube channel is alive and you are available please help me, i also can't understand this i have tired everything i have a client delivery to make! i can't find any good tutorial on this software! please help me! The above link is not working there is no video.
Bumping this because I had the same question: apparently if you link a layer's track to "none", you can get tracking information without the shape moving at all. You can move the shape all you want and the tracking data should stay consistent. However that doesn't look like what Mary is doing here, so I have no idea tbh
It's from the Swedish series 'Real Humans'. I think you were thrown off by the character driveing a Volvo 140, a model also seen in the movie 'The Box' - which you're referring to. :)
If its not really a camera tracker then make it "a camera" if tracking planes and solving the camera give greate results then creating a camera tracking feature would make it all easy and better im sure...
Hey there, I have Mocha AE V4 with Adobe After Effects CC 2015. I can't find the camera solve tab. Do you know how I can alternatively open that tab, or is it locked out of my version of After Effects?
This was ridiculously confusing, and it had nothing to do with how fast she was moving, but with what she's doing! WHY on earth is she moving the shapes all across the plate, and HOW?! Is she animating it somehow? Is she using Keyframes?! And again, WHY?! I thought the whole point to planar tracking was to define different planes that STAY PUT and only move in accordance to the camera and the pixel surface and solve them in order to solve the camera, and the first things she does is start running her x-planes all over the @#$! plate! Can someone help me please?!
This looks familiar is it from that movie uh... it had a red button in it where if you pressed it you get a million dollars but someone you don't know dies
Please tell me if i use this with latest versions of mocha and after effects should i do same edit _) paste step or we have any change in pasting the 3d camara in ae It would be awsome if we have new tutorial with updated version of mocha if there is any changes
why are you doing tutorials so fast ????? for God shake... tutorials are to help us learn the program, not try to imagine what you have done. We need a good tutorial step by step, not this fast thing.
I actually prefer fast tutorials. When I do a long 5 hour Lynda tutorial, I usually play it at double speed. If you can't keep up, always pause and replay, but for people who learn fast, its difficult to speed up filler content. If you're watching this video, it means you're trying to do a very advanced track so I can only assume that she assumes people who are watching have a basic understanding of mocha and how camera tracks work.
@@bradleyatomI also usualy speed up the Ae and Mocha Tutorials. Geroge S, there is also the option in the bottom right corner to speed up or slow down by x1.25, x1,5, x1.75 or x2, very very usefull and sometimes even funny.
she is using a "noise gate" its an audio tool that opens and closes the audio signal of the mic in this case if a certain threshold of db is reached... when she stops speaking, the noise gate closes the signal (you can configure the speed of the gate, when it detects sound to open, and viceversa, and you can also configure a delay to open or close it when the threshold is triggered). This tool is very useful for lowering the noise when you stop speaking, but, opening and closing this gate too quickly can get you this unpleasant results. Musicians use this tool a lot in mics on drums and vocals, its great for controlling feedbacks when you use high gains when the volume is low and there is no need to hear anything.
We've got a few more videos about the camera module here : borisfx.com/videos/?tags=feature:Camera%20Solve%20Module,product:Mocha%20Pro&search= The ones in the Getting Started series are the place to start.