Keying introduction and resources
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Note: When a background is not of a consistent and distinctive
color, you can’t remove the background with keying effects. Under
these conditions, you may need to use rotoscoping—the manual drawing
or painting on individual frames to isolate a foreground object
from its background. (See Rotoscoping introduction and resources.)
About keying: color keys, luminance keys, and difference keysKeying is defining transparency
by a particular color value or luminance value in an image. When
you key out a value, all pixels that have colors or
luminance values similar to that value become transparent.
Keying
makes it easy to replace a background, which is especially useful
when you work with objects too complex to mask easily. When you
place a keyed layer over another layer, the result forms a composite,
in which the background is visible wherever the keyed layer is transparent.
You
often see composites made with keying techniques in movies, for
example, when an actor appears to dangle from a helicopter or float
in outer space. To create this effect, the actor is filmed in an
appropriate position against a solid-color background screen. The
background color is then keyed out and the scene with the actor
is composited over a new background.
The technique of keying
out a background of a consistent color is often called bluescreening or greenscreening,
although you don’t have to use a blue or green screen; you can use
any solid color for a background. Red screens are often used for
shooting non-human objects, such as miniature models of cars and
space ships. Magenta screens have been used for keying work in some
feature films renowned for their visual effects. Other common terms
for this kind of keying are color keying and chroma
keying.
Difference keying works differently
from color keying. Difference keying defines transparency with respect
to a particular baseline background image. Instead of keying out
a single-color screen, you can key out an arbitrary background.
To use difference keying, you must have at least one frame that
contains only the background; other frames are compared to this
frame, and the background pixels are made transparent, leaving the
foreground objects. Noise, grain, and other subtle variations can
make difference keying very difficult to use in practice.
Keying effects, including KeylightAfter Effects includes several built-in keying
effects, as well as the Academy Award-winning Keylight effect, which
excels at professional-quality color keying. (See Keying effects and Matte effects.)
For information on the Keylight effect, see
its documentation in the folder in which the Keylight plug-in is
installed, or on the Foundry website.
Keylight is
not included with the trial version of After Effects CS5. (See Third-party plug-ins included with After Effects.) Keylight is included in the
trial version of After Effects CS5.5 and later.
Note: Though
the color keying effects built into After Effects can be useful
for some purposes, you should try keying with Keylight before attempting
to use these built-in keying effects. Some keying effects—such as
the Color Key effect and the Luma Key effect—have been superseded
by more modern effects like Keylight.
For a video tutorial
on keying with Keylight, go to the Adobe
website.
Mark Christiansen provides tips and techniques
for using Keylight in an excerpt from his book After Effects Studio Techniques: Visual Effects
and Compositing on the Peachpit Press website. In an excerpt
from the “Color Keying in After Effects” chapter of After Effects Studio Techniques, Mark
Christiansen provides detailed tips and techniques for color keying,
including advice on which keying effects to avoid and how to overcome
common keying challenges.
For a step-by-step tutorial demonstrating
the use of the Color Difference Key effect, the Matte Choker effect,
the Spill Suppressor effect, and garbage masks, see the “Keying
in After Effects” chapter of the After Effects Classroom in a Book on
the Peachpit Press website.
Jeff Foster provides free sample
chapters from his book The Green Screen Handbook: Real World Production Techniques.
The sample chapters cover basic compositing, color keying, garbage
mattes, hold-out mattes, and how to avoid common problems with greenscreen
shots. For more information, see the Adobe website.
Rich Young collects
more tips and resources for keying on his After Effects Portal website.
Tips on color keying and compositing from
experienced compositor, Chris Zwar.
Chris & Trish Meyer
shares tips & resources for color keying with
Keylight and other effects.
Note: Keep in mind that generating
a high-quality key can require the application of multiple keying
effects in sequence and careful modification of their properties, especially
if the footage was shot without considering the requirements of
the compositor.
Shooting and acquiring footage for keyingKeying footage that was not acquired correctly
is much more difficult than is keying footage that was acquired
with keying in mind. For best results, use Adobe OnLocation™ to
monitor color and lighting as you acquire footage for color keying.
For
tips on shooting footage so that color keying is easier and more
successful, see Jonas Hummelstrand’s General Specialist website.
Alex
Lindsay provides an article on the ProVideo Coalition website about setting up
and lighting a green background in preparation for color keying
work. In part two of his greenscreen primer on the ProVideo Coalition website, Alex Lindsay provides
detailed information about cameras, codecs, and capture systems
to use when acquiring footage for color keying.
Light
your color screen uniformly, and keep it free of wrinkles.
Start with the highest-quality materials you can gather,
such as film that you scan and digitize.
Use uncompressed footage (or, at least, files with the least
possible amount of compression). Many compression algorithms, especially
the algorithms used in DV, HDV, and Motion JPEG, discard subtle
variations in blue—which may be necessary to create a good key from
a bluescreen. Use footage with the least color subsampling possible—for
example, 4:2:2 rather than 4:2:0 or 4:1:1. (For information about
color subsampling, see the Wikipedia website and the Adobe website.)
Robbie
Carman and Richard Harrington provide an excerpt on the Peachpit website from their book Video Made On A Mac that
demonstrates how to plan, shoot, key, and composite a greenscreen
shot.
Tips for keying with After EffectsNoise and compression artifacts can
cause problems for keying, especially difference keying. Often,
applying a slight blur before keying can reduce noise and compression
artifacts enough to improve keying results. For example, blurring
the blue channel for DV footage can smooth out noise in a bluescreen.
The
KeyerforDV animation preset available through the AE Enhancers forum automates the process
of blurring the blue and green channels before keying DV footage.
Use a garbage matte to roughly outline your subject so that
you don’t have to waste time keying out parts of the background
far from the foreground subject. (See Use a garbage matte.)
Use a hold-out matte to roughly protect areas that are of
a similar color to the background from being keyed out. (See Use a hold-out matte.)
To help you view transparency, temporarily change the background
color of the composition, or include a background layer behind the
layer you are keying out. As you apply the keying effect to the
layer in the foreground, the composition background (or a background
layer) shows through, making it easy to view transparent areas.
(See Composition settings.)
For evenly lit footage, adjust keying controls on only one
frame. Choose the most intricate frame of the scene, one involving
fine detail such as hair and transparent or semitransparent objects,
such as smoke or glass. If the lighting is constant, the same settings
you apply to the first frame are applied to all subsequent frames.
If lighting changes, you may need to adjust keying controls for
other frames. Place keyframes for the first set of keying properties at
the start of the scene. If you are setting keyframes for one property
only, use Linear interpolation. For footage that requires keyframes
for multiple interacting properties, use Hold interpolation. If
you set keyframes for keying properties, you may want to check the
results frame by frame. Intermediate keying values may appear, producing
unexpected results.
To key well-lit footage shot against a color screen, start
with the Color Difference Key. Add the Spill Suppressor to remove
traces of the key color, and then use one or more of the other Matte
effects, if necessary. If you are not satisfied with the results,
try starting again with the Linear Color Key.
To key well-lit footage shot against multiple colors or unevenly
lit footage shot against a bluescreen or greenscreen, start with
the Color Range key. Add the Spill Suppressor and other effects
to refine the matte. If you are not completely satisfied with the
results, try starting with or adding the Linear Color Key.
To key dark areas or shadows, use the Extract Key on the
Luminance channel.
To make a static background scene transparent, use the Difference
Matte Key. Add the Simple Choker and other effects as needed to
refine the matte.
After you have used a key to create transparency, use Matte
effects to remove traces of key color and create clean edges.
Blurring the alpha channel after keying can soften the edges
of the matte, which can improve compositing results.
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