Today has been a fine day...for tuts! I`ve set my eyes on a few things that might make our short-film project look better and I`ve tested two things: blemish removals (especially for close-ups, since we didn`t have a make-up person on the set) and the bleach bypass.
Now, the bleach tutorial has helped me familiarise with the Luma Matte, but in terms of its effects (the ones I managed to achieve anyway) I am not sure I`m doing a proper job. I find I couldn`t really spot that much of a difference between shots that used it, and those that didn`t (maybe I was too tired). Here is an example that actually demonstrates the effect quite well:
This is the image without the Matte...
This is the image with the Matte...
I`ve noticed that since the lighting, contrast and saturation levels are different from one scene to the other, in order to get an effective matte, one has to take each scene separately and tweak the parameters. I guess that would mean jumping between Premiere and After Effects to treat each sequence.
But let`s get to the piece de resistance! The Bleach bypass has been around for quite a while, being used before the digital switch-over in photo labs. Here are some examples (and I don`t think I need to point out which one`s has bleach bypass applied):
I have also made an overview of the entire footage today, and I`m looking forward to discussing the next editing bits with the group members.
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