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Activity Forums Adobe After Effects Keying Problems/Help

  • Keying Problems/Help

    Posted by Justin Toney on March 18, 2008 at 3:50 am

    Before I begin, please use this image as a reference…

    I am having a terrible time with a key in After Effects.

    For this project I am using Primatte Keyer which is doing
    somewhat of a good job. I have a few different layers setup
    where each focuses on a different issue (from basic key to
    key for hair). This was suggested to do because it would
    help created a cleaner alpha channel. Next I was told to
    take these layers and use Alpha Add so that they would all
    come together to form a single alpha channel (I hope I did
    this right). Afterwards I brought that composition into a
    new composition which included the original footage. The
    treated comp was used as an alpha track matte which gave me
    unfavorable results (as seen in the picture). What is
    happening is that it appears that there are waves going
    across the edges of the keyed image. I can see the blue
    screen moving around and it doesnt look good at all. I have
    tried to choke it a bit but the blue still appears. Does
    anyone have any suggestions on how this can be corrected?

    Additionally there is an issue with spillage on the comp.
    I have tried using many spill killers but mixed results.
    However, none seem to remove the blue without totally making
    the image useless.

    If anyone has any suggestions I would love to hear them. And
    if I am not doing the alpha correctly, just slap me a couple
    of times and let me know. Thanks a bunch!!!

    Justin Toney replied 18 years, 1 month ago 7 Members · 13 Replies
  • 13 Replies
  • Brian Berneker

    March 18, 2008 at 6:41 am

    Man, I don’t know where to start…. if your using AE CS3, I’d say ditch primatte and use Keylight. Nothing against primatte – I honestly don’t know it that well, but Keylight has been the best keyer I’ve ever seen and it comes standard with AE CS3.

  • Andrew Wade

    March 18, 2008 at 7:15 am

    the problem your seeing us due to a poorly lit forground. that is some pretty bad spill on the actor there.

    I’d reccomend using keylight as well its an excelent keyer. and comes with some good spill suppression. If you are going to use keylight pay attention to the graining that can sometimes occur once you apply the final key. twear the despot controlls to get it looking right,

  • Justin Toney

    March 18, 2008 at 12:34 pm

    Like I said, it was lit poorly which I had absolutely no control over. I will try your keylight and see what I can come up with. I have absolutely no experience in using that so hopefully I can get something.

  • Steve Tarlton

    March 18, 2008 at 3:33 pm
  • Justin Toney

    March 18, 2008 at 4:33 pm

    Do you think this will remove the wavyness on the edges?

  • Steve Tarlton

    March 18, 2008 at 4:55 pm

    Not having seen your original footage I couldn’t say for sure, but I would guess that you wouldn’t get the “wavyness” on the edge. You could have the so called “jaggies”, but if you turn up the screen softness a little that should help. If you keep tweaking keylight you can probably pull an acceptable key.

    Steve

  • Darby Edelen

    March 18, 2008 at 6:55 pm

    I realize we’re looking at the effects applied to the original layer and not the layer that has the key applied, but I couldn’t help but notice the PrimatteKeyer effect applied after several Change To Color effects and a Hue/Saturation effect. Do you have any of these effects applied on your keyed footage layer? You should pretty much never use any color correction effects before trying to pull a key…

    Darby Edelen
    Designer
    Left Coast Digital
    Santa Cruz, CA

  • Justin Toney

    March 18, 2008 at 8:41 pm

    What I was told is that I should apply color effects to make the keyed footage more keyable and use:

    “Alpha Add mode mostly to get linear transparency behavior”

    It was then suggested to:

    “use the sub-comp as a matte on the other clip”

    So I was just doing what folks have suggested.

  • Darby Edelen

    March 18, 2008 at 9:49 pm

    [Justin Toney] “What I was told is that I should apply color effects to make the keyed footage more keyable”

    I personally think that’s a bad suggestion, you’re more likely to make the footage less keyable, especially with Hue/Saturation changes. Most keyers work to determine the foreground and background based on a difference in hue and saturation between some defined ‘screen color’ and the color being tested. If you have a green screen and you try to make the green ‘greener’ in hue and boost the saturation, you are also making everything else ‘greener’ and more saturated and therefore more likely to be keyed along with the screen. Although you can limit the range of your hue/saturation adjustment, and this may possibly help your key, it is more thank likely redundant because the keyer is already looking for a very limited range of hue to key… and if you’re off at all in your limited hue/saturation adjustment then you could inadvertently make certain areas of the footage more or less keyable.

    My analogy would be having trouble finding your keys in the morning. It would be like going outside, attaching your house to a crane, flipping it upside down and going back in to look for them again… Eventually the keys might come tumbling out, but more than likely you’ll just make a mess of your house.

    There are adjustments you can make that will benefit you though, such as reducing noise/grain.

    Darby Edelen
    Designer
    Left Coast Digital
    Santa Cruz, CA

  • Justin Toney

    March 19, 2008 at 3:53 am

    Should the footage be deinterlaced using this tutorial? https://www.creativecow.net/articles/kramer_andrew/deinterlace/deinterlace.html

    BTW Thanks SOOOOO much for the keylight suggestion, made a ton of difference. I still see some waves but im going to work more on fixing that.

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