After Keying v1.0.2 Crack + Tutorial video - Adobe Uncle

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Wednesday, April 15, 2020

After Keying v1.0.2 Crack + Tutorial video

After Keying v1.0.2 Crack + Tutorial video


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Great green screen work is more about lighting than anything other. If you may have the world’s best chromakey software at your disposal, If your Images were sloppily shot, there is only then much that After Effects can do.
Let’s take a look at how to quickly color key Image in After Effects. This post is meant to be just a simple but useful tip there is a lot of more that goes into getting great color keys, but if you need a fast color key, this technique will work.

Video Tutorial




1.   Put Your Green Screen Image Over Your Background


Put your green screen Image over your background image in an After Effects composition. Some people prefer to use a bright background, as it’s easier to spot key imperfections on a solid background like red, but it all depends on your own preference. For the purposes of our tutorial, we’re just going to place the image directly on top of the background.

2. Mask Out Garbage Areas



With your Image selected, select the pen tool (G) and cut out any extra areas that aren’t keyable in your Image. Generally, draw a Sketch around your subject and close the mask by selecting the first mask point.


3. Apply the Keylight Effect to Your Image



In the effect’s browser, search for the Key-light effect. Simply drag the effect to your Image in the composition timeline.


4. Use the Eye Dropper to Select Your Color



Select the eyedropper button in the Key-light effect and select a green part of your green screen.
5. Change the Dropdown Menu to Combine Fade
In the dropdown menu next to the word View in the Key-light effect then change the setting from Final Result to Combine Fade. This will show you your better scene of your “color-key”. The keyed-out pixels will be black. Visible pixels will be white.


6. Adjust Settings Under Screen Fade



Now it is time to start refining your color-key. In the “dropdown” menu title Screen Fade, you will see a few adjustable settings. Here are a few tips for adjusting them:

o   Hit to '‘Clip Black'’ to help get free of shadow noise, but do not put it some further of than 15

o   “minimize ‘Clip White’, by few points who not to less than 85”

o   “Adjust ‘Screen Grow/Shrink’ only if necessary”

          Bring ‘Screen Despot White’ up just a little, 0 – 5 should be great. Just keep an eye on the edges of your subject.


We could get really deep into what each of these settings does, but for the purposes of this quick tip, we’ll skip an explanation for now. If you want to learn something more about color keying, I recommend checking out Keying Fundamentals in Adobe After Effects over at Premium Beat.



7. Change The ‘View’ Menu to ‘Final Result’



Once your subject is solid white with no grey noise than change the View Menu from Combine Fade from the Final Result.

8. Adjust Transform Properties and Stylize


Now you can begin to focus on compositing your subject into the background. Because After Effects renders the effects in order, you can still apply color correction adjustments to your subject without affecting your key.
One of my exact and very good methods for compositing chromakey green screen subjects is using the "RGB" channel compositing method outlined in this tutorial from Adobe Uncle..




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