Posts Tagged ‘After Effects’

 

The Mobile Editor – 22. October, 2009

Times are tough. Jobs are scarce. You probably know someone that hasn’t worked at all this year. For those of us lucky enough to still have jobs, there’s a good chance we’re working at reduced pay or being forced into furloughs.

And so I stumbled across this article on freelance editing. If I may summarize, your three goals as a freelance editor are:

  • Be a good editor
  • Be mobile
  • Get rehired

The article has some great tips (my favorite might be the “Hard Drive of Tricks”) that every serious freelance editor should take to heart.

Like me.

For the past year I’ve had three part-time jobs while working on my own creative endeavors including writing, directing small projects and posting my first feature.

In the past few months, I lost one of those jobs. Another job is forcing me into furloughs. A third is squeezing my hours and constantly paying me late. Add a recent tragedy that has hoisted additional financial responsibilities onto my shoulders and it’s time to put on the “freelance post-centric ninja” hat and start knocking on doors, offering my services.

I have my own editing rig and access to a second.

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I can cut your project on Final Cut Pro, do some color correction and title design in After Effects, cut and mix your audio in Pro Tools or SoundTrack Pro. I can also write, direct, shoot & record audio. I’m a one-man band and here’s the proof:

I’m ready to tackle your documentary or web series. Bring it!

Posted in Post-Production

Bits of Chicago – 8. October, 2009

A couple of years ago, I traveled to Chicago to see a few friends. Here’s the proof.

Factoids: I shot about an hour of HDV footage on a Sony A1U, converted it to ProRes, edited it down in Final Cut Pro and timed it in After Effects with Colorista.

Practice Make Green Screen Perfection – 5. August, 2009

To further expound upon the making of my Amazon spec commercial, there was one green screen shot. I approached it with a firm hand and an empty mind. That is to say I’ve never pulled a green screen before.

Now, I have shot them in the pat. One of my earliest jobs was capturing some green screen material for the band Train (I can never listen to that song ever again) for when they appeared on The Tonight Show with Leno. My collaborators were both guys I went to school with. One now directs webisodes for Disney. The other directed MONSTER HOUSE.

Regardless, I jumped into my green screen head first. First I set a pretty specific garbage matte and then I used After Effects and Keylight to pull the green. It worked pretty well except some of the green elements in front of the screen weren’t the exact same color of green (the shooter in me knew better but the producer in me knew we didn’t have time to fix this). These elements didn’t pull like I’d hoped. There were two paths here. One, add another instance of Keylight to try and pull the second type of green or two, adjust the garbage matte so it’s more of a roto. I tried option one and everything went nuts so I hit “undo” and went with option two. Very tedious but it got the job done.

If only I had a way to practice pulling green, garbage matting and rotoscoping but I don’t shoot much of that kind of material. Wait, you can. A few days after I wrapped I found this site. They have tons of green screen examples with all the elements necessary for a fully realized comp. If you’ve ever wanted to try your hand at this or if you have a comp in your future or if you just want to know the kind of Hell I went through, download any of these and see what it’s like.

Posted in Post-Production

Amazon Spec: Debrief – 3. August, 2009

So while I wait for August 24th to roll around (that’s when Amazon announces the 5 finalist for the audience award and the jury prize winner), here is my promised debrief. Warning, it is very tech heavy.

First, my 30-second spec combined live action and stop-motion animation. I’ve done one other film like this (check out CONVERSING). For that short, I shot both the live action and stop-motion animation with a Panasonic DVX100; I used iStopMotion to record the stop-motion animation to my laptop. The digital video was shot 30p and the animation 15 fps. I used a Sennheiser ME66 and ProTools 6.4 to record the voice talent. I edited the film with Final Cut Pro and mixed in ProTools. I was going to use the same setup for this project but I really wanted a higher resolution final so I thought I’d put the final cut through Instant HD and viola, I’m done.

Just one problem: the test I put through Instant HD didn’t look as good as I hoped. I don’t blame the plugin, I just didn’t know how to punch up the optimum settings for export. Plus I was haunted by this post.

I also had access to both a Sony A1U HDV camcorder and a Nikon D100 plus I was looking for a good excuse to learn After Effects so why not take the plunge with this project? Who doesn’t love a challenge, right?

So, first I recorded my four actors (big thanks to Curtiss, Dan, Karina & Michael for lending their talent) using the above mentioned setup. I quickly cut and mixed the dialog so I could sync it up to my “proof of concept” cut. I then shot the live action (an extra thanks to Dan) as 59.94 HDV with the Sony “fake” Cineframe 30 mode turned on. After shooting I immediatly transcoded all the footage to ProRes for the rest of post. All of that went according to plan. The animation, not so much.

I thought about shooting RAW files with the D100 but I’d heard from my photographer friends that it’s a whole other beast so I chose large RGB TIFF files (3000 x 2000) instead. Unfortunately, the camera came with one 512MB CompactFlash (CF) card. That card coulldn’t hold more than 17 shots so if I had any animation longer than 1s4f (1 second, 4 frames), I’d have to download the card, wipe it clean and pray I hadn’t bumped the camera in the process. Um, no thanks. I looked in the manual and it said the camera could handle the “promised” 1GB card but nothing bigger. Guess what? Today it’s hard to find a CF card smaller than 4GB. Thank the lord the 4GB card worked. Unfortuantely, that was just the start of my troubles.

After shooting my first stop-motion shot I immediately ran head first into another problem. Although I put the camera in full manual, including the iris, the camera still adjusted the f-stop by 1/3 to 1/2 a stop according to the built in spot meter. That meant that the brightness of some frames in a single shot would be different than the others. I’d have to correct brightness frame by frame. Tedious? Yes. Doable? Yes. But that wasn’t the biggest pain in my neck.

No, it was the camera and the CF card that almost killed me. The camera could shoot 6 shots before it needed time to write the images from the internal memory buffer to the CF card. It could take 2-5 minutes to write one image to the CF. But the bigger problem was downloading from the camera into iPhoto. This took around 20 minutes per download and once took almost an hour. This forced my one-day shoot to take twice as long. Ugh.

Once in iPhoto, I renamed and exported the TIFF files to an external drive. It was then time for some After Effects magic. I was glad AFX allowed me to import a folder of still images as a contiguous video clip. Once in a timeline, I corrected the gamma to fix for the iris adjustment. Damn, that took a long time and boy did I grind my teeth. After that I created JPEG proxy files for the TIFF clips (a very good idea that saved me a ton of time). I then created another AFX project where I would lay in the animated clips end to end to get a sense of editing and pace. And, as I had 3000×2000 images but knew my final output would be a 1920×1080 HD Quicktime, I decided to create camera moves in post. Oh boy, the results looked so good I couldn’t have been happier.

Also, at this point, I could fix any image problems while still in the highest possible resolution; the Clone tool became one of my most trusted tools and Keylight is awesome for green-screen work. Once that was done, I took each shot and output it as a 1920×1080 ProRes Quciktime so that I could combine my live action and stop motion in a single AFX comp where I could color correct with Colorista which is a GPU based plugin; As you’d know from a previous post, the TIFF files were too big for this.

Once I laid out all the clips, it was time to apply Colorista. I took the Stu Maschwitz method and used Adjustment Layers instead of loading effects onto the master clip. This came in handy when I wanted to swap out clips (which happened more than a few times). Each clip had one color correction layer and all the live action clips had a secondary correction layer so I could bring my actor’s eyes up out of the darkness. Lastly, I applied a final “looks” layer over the whole project.

On the sound side, I tried Soundtrack Pro but grew frustrated so quickly I fell back to ProTools for the sound edit, design and mix. I did have to add a bit of music and I used GarageBand to create the cues and then exported them to ProTools.

Lastly, FYI, it took 14 minutes to render out a 30-second clip in After Effects but I’m incredibly happy with the results.

Here’s hoping you get to see the fruit of my labors as a finalist.

Comic-Con 2009 Day 03 – 25. July, 2009

Started the day early today, tried to crash the LOST panel but the line was so long I decided to cruise the exhibit floor again.

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FYI, there was a steampunk meet-up today so there were a ton of folk in awesome costumes.

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Note to all, if you want to wear a costume to Comic-Con and do so with style, go steampunk.

I then jumped into a line thinking “30 minutes would be enough time to get into a ballroom for a FUTURAMA panel. Um, no. I missed that entire panel and most of the SIMPSONS panel that followed.

Undeterred, I lined up extra early for my “Writing for TV” panel which meant I sat through “A Spotlight on Seth” and they didn’t mean Rogan or McFarlane. This guys, this illustrator… wow. He projected a PowerPoint highlighting works from his sketch book and then proceeded to tell twelve seemingly unrelated autobiographical stories. It was like a mini episode of THIS AMERICAN LIFE. My attention was rapt. This artist has a new fan.

The “Writing for TV” panel was just what I expected (I’ve been to hundreds of these by now) but the funniest moment came when the writers started heckling a woman in a military costume and then she said, “this isn’t a costume, it’s my uniform.” How quickly they tripped over themselves to thank her for her service (FYI, she was a communications liaison).

After that I wandered towards Hall H (I heard someone call it “Hall Hell”) expecting a 5 hours wait to hear Kevin Smith talk.

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Imagine my delight when I walked in without any wait. I was bummed that Kevin didn’t show any clips of his upcoming movie but the crowd loved him anyway.

After that it was time for a steak dinner and then back to the After Effects grind (gotta take 2k stills, do a basic gamma correction, animate them along their X, Y and Z axis to give the illusion of a hand-held camera and then crop, adjust & resize them for a 1920 x 1080, 29.97 HDTV timeline).

(Ugh)

Posted in Off-Topic

How Did They Do That – 3. June, 2009

Thanks to a friend on Twitter, I stumbled upon this:

What’s sweetest about this spec spot is that they show you how they did it with Final Cut Pro and After Effects.

I don’t know about you but I always find process fascinating.

Posted in Post-Production

Wrap-up: Green Screen-o-rama! – 31. May, 2007

For the sake of closure, I wanted to let you know that the green screen shoot went off without a hitch. The screen was green, it was well lit and, if I do say so myself, I did an awesome job operating camera with a fig-rig (you must get your hands on one for an afternoon; it’s addicting). It almost made me nostalgic for the days when I wanted to be a DP (that was my focus throughout undergrad).

Almost. :)

Here’s hoping the director hires a great compositor that can pull clean mattes from NTSC DV and it’s puny 4:1:1 color space. My research indicates that you want After Effects, Shake or at least Motion for the job. In a pinch, you could use the dvMatte Pro plug-in for Final Cut but you had better know what you’re doing.

Posted in Cinematography