Need to quickly key out your green screen work? Just follow these easy steps.
- Place Your Green Screen Footage Over Your Background.
- Mask Out Garbage Areas.
- Apply the Keylight Effect to Your Footage.
- Use the Eye Dropper to Select Your Color.
- Change the Dropdown Menu to Combine Matte.
- Adjust Settings Under Screen Matte.
How do you add a Keylight in After Effects?
Once you’ve imported your selected clips into After Effects and created a new composition, it’s time to add the Keylight plugin. As with any effect, it can be found in the Effects & Presets panel, under the Keying subfolder. Just click and drag the effect onto your footage to apply it.
How do I use Keylight in nuke?
Start Nuke and read in both images. From the Keyer menu, apply Keylight and attach a Viewer. Click the color swatch next to ScreenColor to activate the eye dropper. In the Viewer, Ctrl/Cmd+Shift+Alt+click and drag a rectangular area over the blue pixels as shown below.
How do I import AEX?
You can install a plug-in to extend the functionality of After Effects by placing it in the plug-ins folder. AEX plugins are stored in the following directory: Windows – Program Files\Adobe\Adobe After Effects (version)\Support Files\Plug-ins. macOS – Applications/Adobe/Adobe After Effects (version)/Plug-ins.
How do you mask a Keylight in After Effects?
After Effects CC 2018 Create an ‘Outside’ garbage mask, name it, and set its mode to ‘None’. In the Keylight effect properties, under ‘Inside Mask’, select the inside mask you created. In the Keylight effect properties, under ‘Outside Mask’, select the outside mask you created, and also check Invert if needed.
Does Premiere Pro have keylight?
Premiere Pro only: I apply keylighting in Premiere Pro via Ultrakey, and get a mediocre result. Rendertimes are great! 100% GPU usage, and around 15 min rendertime for a 20min clip, and an incredibly workable timeline.
How do you make a green screen look realistic?
Five tips for making green screen shots more realistic
- Camera movement. Adding camera movement will make the scene look more realistic, and there are two ways to do it.
- Light the character to match the scene.
- Light wrap.
- Shoot with a wide aperture.
- Use a higher shutter speed.