Friday, February 25, 2011

Experimenting with Compositing Modes = Awesome!


So while tweaking my work reel I thought I'd find a way to make the colored animation tests of the acrobats doing their stuff blend in a little more seamlessly. Normally you would drop all the PNGs into After Effects and sequence them into a video there but I did it in iStopmotion as a test and planned to do it in AE later. Lo and behold something strangely cool resulted on this. Even though this images were PNG files (which preserves the transparency) and had no background, iStopmotion hasn't figured this out yet and just fills the empty space with black. This wouldn't be the case with After Effects. I put the test into the work reel for a temporary placeholder and I tried playing around with the compositing modes so you can at least see the watercolor background beneath it. I was surprised by the results.
This is what the original test looks like. Note the black background.


The watercolor painting is brought into Final Cut and placed beneath the video clip.


Right clicking on the video clip and then selecting Difference in the Composite drop down menu.


See the difference! (^_^ lol, no pun intended)


It looks really interesting now because the inverted texture of the watercolor in the background can be seen in the acrobat. So spooky! But now the colors need a little adjusting. In the Effects menu, scroll down to Video Filters followed by Color Correction and selected the Color Corrector filter.


Using this tool I can change the color and value a bit to make the acrobat a little easier to see. I'm just going to adjust the value and saturation controls.


Here are the comparisons between the different stages.


And here is the final product.


3 comments:

Sara Smilnak said...

Wow Erin its looking really cool. I cant wait to see it when its done.

Jeff said...

I was about to stop reading at that pun, but instead I stuck around and liked what I saw. I think that's a good look for the acrobats and you could keep that watercolor effect for them as a mask in the final shots.

Jayna S said...

It looks amazing Erin! Keep up the awesome work! Lol, I might have to ask you to show me cool after effects tricks when I start getting my film going! n_n