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Planning Next GreenScreen Shoot for TenBefore

We have had the creative brainstorm, we have had the follow up with our Service Planning Director. And I have made an important contact in the film business; when God puts things into place then there is no way to miss them, well one shouldn’t.

Anyway we are going to take the lessons learnt from the first attempt, going to take into consideration the comments and criticism, and we are going to blow everyone’s mind’s away, oh yeah.

This time I am going to hire a camera – a Sony EX1, to use instead of my own Panasonic AG-DVX100BE. First of all because of the 4:2:2 colour sampling and 2nd for the resolution. I was hoping for the HVX200 – of which none were available, but I understand that the EX1 has a better picture – we shall see :-) .

I am also going to hire 3 KinoFlos instead of 2, and somehow find better and wider fabric.
Well this is all pending the Ministry Team’s approval.

The plan is to film enough footage to cover a framework of 6 weeks of TenBefores with variations in script, presenter and appearance. It is going to be a hectic Saturday, yip – this Saturday. All the Green Screen shots will be done on the day, any other information segments that do not require keying will be done on the DVX when needed.

This is going to awesome!

Digital Production Buzz

Besides the awesome weekly podcast that you can subscribe to via iTunes or their site, there is a very informative set of videos that can be retrieved via iTunes or gimp.tv.

Here you can watch Larry Jordan talk about choosing an HD camera, getting prepared for editing, etc
There are currently 7 episodes that are free.
However the premium versions can also be purchased for something like $2, in these versions Larry goes into much more detail.

Really worth a look see :-)
 

The First TenBefore – Conclusion

We filmed a TenBefore Segment for our KidStuf environment using a green screen, Panasonic AG-DVX100BE, Shake, FCS2. The purpose was to create a dynamic info and entertaining segment of up to Ten Minutes that would lead directly into the countdown of KidStuf. 

Here I  wrap up all that we did to achieve this.

Here is an article I wrote for my Church’s tech blog that serves well to explain some things I had to consider:

Considerations in Green Screen Shooting

Where I talk about some of the things I had to consider for the green screen shoot.

Next time we hope to be able to budget for more suitable camera and obtain a larger and more colour accurate green screen.

When I say next time – I mean like next week and every week after that :-) well we are planning to film enough footage to cater for 6 weeks of Ten Before for both our main service environment and our KidStuf environment - h e c t i c.

Check out all the posts about the first Green Screen shoot for our TenBefore segment:

All of TenBefore

Bundle of cool Blog Entries

Green Screen

Editing

  • Moving media and Reconnecting
  • Motion: Ken Burns Redux (Movie)
  • Don’t forget Larry Jordan’s Tip of the Day and Articles here
  • And Ken Stone’s collection of articles and review, here Which includes a recent article on creating a Play All button in DVD SP 4 by Jake Russell
  • Here is something that is definitely going to save me time in FCP projects that have motion projects in the timeline; Rendering Motion Projects In Final Cut Pro 

Have a great weekend :-)

Cheers

 

 

The First TenBefore – Compositing and Editing

Once I had exported the individual shots out of Shake with their mattes intact, I was able to simply composite the shot over the background that I wanted in Final Cut Pro. The codec I used to export was Animation and the file format – QuickTime.

One could argue that the compositing could have been done wholly in Shake, but in my case I was working with individual shots that I wanted to edit in a timeline, also I wanted to be able to change the background when I wanted to in that timeline and not have do it in every single Shake project. Besides I just felt more comfortable editing in Final Cut Pro.

 

As for my little rotating countdown cube,

1. Downloaded a Motion project of a 3D cube that had drop zones for all its sides.

2. Dropped the height

3. Extended the project to 10 minutes

4. Added a reasonable spin that would not be distracting.

5. Used a color matte generator in FCP with a Time Code Generator that I cropped  to suit my needs.

6. Put my generated countdown from 10 minutes to zero in the sides of the rotating object.

 

The rest of the objects that I used were simply overlaid where I wanted to.

The Backgound was done in Motion by Dylan, very cooly done indeed.

 

Directing For Greenscreen and VFX

prepshootpost has this great post; directing-for-greenscreen-and-vfx, of some serious Green Screen work. Take a look the Pictures; cool camera, especially for Green Screen – a Sony F950 which is 4:4:4 check the specs here.


 

The First TenBefore – Keying

Hi,

First I want to give a shout out to Morgan, the presenter and organizer of this project; without him I may have been humming and hahhing about how difficult this was going to be and how I could not find someone to present. Just shows you, God’s timing is perfect and God provides.

Secondly to Dylan, who did the TenBefore transition and background, he’s going study at varsity only next year and think that he’s gonna teach them a few things :-)

Also, just to point to the Previous two posts regarding this series:

The First Ten Before - Introduction

The First Ten Before – Camera, Screen and Lights

Ok, now the nitty gritty stuff that Compositing Green Screen footage is made of.

Here is a typical shot I started off with. Morgan delivering some information for one of the segments. This is medium shot that I found much easier to light and most certainly to key.

I ended up choosing the Primatte Keyer over KeyLight and Chroma Key mainly because it produced the most desirable result after much trial and error. Primatte also allowed me to resample differently for foreground, background, spill sponge and matte sponge.

Because of the inherent short comings of colour decimation in PAL, or for that matter; NTSC and HDV, I had to figure out how to blur the UV channels. This was because of PAL’s 4:2:0 colour sub sampling algorithm; which may be ok for saving on space, bit rate  or whatever, but ummm, it’s an utter head ache for colour keying. hmmm that is why I would love to try out the RED One :-) . A very useful book that give an all round and easy to understand description of colour decimation along with all things compositing is Steve Wright’s book called Compositing Visual Effects: Essentials for the Aspiring Artist, check it out at Amazon here.

I did try the convert to YUV, blur the UV channels and then return to RGB, but not with much success. Instead I found two useful macros for Shake at highend3d - the FourXXEnhancer and PreprocessDV which can be used together or separately. 

I used a small holdout matte and a garbage matte to help the keyer out a little.

Also, maybe as a cheat, I used another keying macro for Shake from hightend3d called Light Wrap, just to sort out the edges of Morgan and to get the effect of actually being in the room. Ok, you would have re-render if you ever had to change the backing, especially if the colour change was huge.

Here is the final result of the matte I was able to produce. The edges were not perfect, but I was quite happy with the edges around Morgan’s head.

Morgan\'s Alpha Channel

And here is my Shake node structure:

Node View

Next I’ll chat about how I composited and edited the final sequence.

Feel free to offer and comments, suggestion and criticisms, we are planning to make another attempt that will hopefully be much better and every bit of help would be greatly appreciated.

Can you edit this better?

OpenCut calls for participation in it’s open source film competition, http://www.opencut.org.

What is awesome about this is that you get to cut footage filmed from a RED camera and be part of a professionally shot film. The prize is a AJA IO HD from Silverado, that is cool. And you get credit on IMDB for editing the film.

But what is not so cool is that 185GB of footage that has to be downloaded; not a feasible thing to do with my internet connection :-(

[EDIT:] Nope it cannot be downloaded as per the comment below. The Rules of the competition specify by way of inference that u have to ship a drive. “You will be given ample notice that a new OpenCut is starting with plenty of time to turn in a drive.” etc

The First Ten Before – Camera, Screen and Lights

Most of the Ten Before footage was always going to be footage of someone talking in front of a green screen. The idea was to composite this talker(talent) into a 3D environment or room so that various graphics and text elements could be introduced into the scene as if by magic, well sort of.

So we did a few tests, hmmm, from the onset it was obvious that the camera was introducing a lot of edge sharpening. The camera I used was a Panasonic DVX100BE. After some research on the net I found that this was indeed true and that I was supposed to change the detail levels to a so called sweet spot of -3 (see an brilliant forum discussion at http://forums.creativecow.net/thread/193/868436).

I did set the Panasonic’s edge enhancement to -3 in one of the Scene File settings; that is both the Detail Level and the V Detail Level. But I have to say that I still struggled with a halo effect around the talent when I performed the Keying in Shake 4.1. I’ll explain what I did in a different section, but suffice to say – I did a lot of manipulation of the UV channels to get an ok result (bearing in mind the 4:2:0 limitations in this SD PAL camera).

I must say that the Panasonic DVX 100BE is a cool camera for general shooting and that with decent lighting and proper technique on can get a good enough key, but I dream of the day when I can try Panasonic HVX200A or better the HPX170 – both 4:2:2 colour sub sampling cameras, or ummm the errrr coolest of all RED One with 4:4:4 oh yeah.

The two things I insisted on when this Ten Before was shot was that one; the camera must not move and two; the talent must be as still as possible. Purely to make the keying a simpler process. I shot the segments at either a full body shot or a medium close up; filming all the full body shots on after the other then all the mediums. This was a huge time saver because I was able to apply the same key to all the same shot types :-) – with, of course, slight changes to the rotoscope I used as a garbage matte. This worked well, but most people commented that the lack of movement was boring – well you win some and you loose some.

Here is a still from one of the full body shots, you can see that I did not have enough width to work with – another reason that movement was restricted – next time get more material.


The green screen I used was something I picked up at a material shop; very cheap, very bad. But it was a good try none the less.

As far as lighting goes, I used three 150W dedo lights to light Morgan, and then two 2x4ft KinoFlos to light the screen. With all that lighting I achieved consistency during the shoot but I felt that I could have done with more light, maybe more ambient light. The shadows around the legs became a problem in Shake – I had to roto them quite closely; wasting a bit of time and giving the feet an unnatural look. I suppose I could have used the shadows to create a ‘reflection’ but then I would not have had control of that reflection.

 

Ok I also realized that the lighting of the green screen was not even, I should have used a vector scope. And yes I did use the one in Final Cut Pro 6.0.3 during testing but for some reason I forgot about it when I did the actual shoot. Too caught up in things you know ;-) . Next time I’ll make sure the camera is hooked up to the MBP and FCP has it’s scopes open in the capture window (Non controllable device selected).

 

Right, well, any comments? Next I’ll explain what I did in Shake and FCP along with a few screen shots :-)

 

 

 

The First Ten Before – Introduction

This was my first attempt at filming and editing a Ten Before segment for our Church at Stellenberg Community Church, over the next while I will detail the testing process and the workflows involved to achieve the end result.

The basic idea and layout originated from the North Point Community Church Ten Before series; the Media Team guys there have done such great work; http://motionhouse.wordpress.com/

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