GREEN SCREEN help

thebrain900 wrote on 8/31/2009, 11:37 AM
I have Movie Studio 8.0 and I am trying to use the Croma Keyer to do a Green Screen efftect.

I have a Video of a Red Curtain that openeup and in the middle of it is the Green background that I want to remove to show a video behind it.

What is going on is this?
The video of the Curtain is Red with Yellow Sunflowes on it.

Now when the Curtain opens the bacground is Green so I remove the Green color but it also take away the Sunflowers to?????

But the Sunflowers are Yellow???

Comments

thebrain900 wrote on 9/1/2009, 8:13 AM
OK I need just a little more help?

I do not understand the diferance between the High Thrashold and Low Thrashold Sliders in the Chroma Keyer window???
thebrain900 wrote on 9/1/2009, 3:25 PM
Anyone???
Eugenia wrote on 9/1/2009, 6:32 PM
You simply need to play with the controls of the chroma plugin. If it still doesn't do it for you, then you needed to use HD (HD behaves better in green screens), and you needed to use the right lighting in the room.

Nothing more we can do about this.
Tim L wrote on 9/1/2009, 7:43 PM
This is a basic, cook-book list of instructions for using the chroma keyer function, either with computer-generated masks or with green screen or blue screen footage you've recorded on your camcorder.

1. Put your green screen footage on the timeline. Put your playback cursor somewhere on it so the green screen image is in your preview window.

2. Drag and drop one of the Chroma Keyer video FX presets onto your clip (or apply it by clicking the FX icon on the clip itself, etc.)

3. This is important: In the Video Event FX pop-up window for the Chroma Keyer function, locate the "Chroma Keyer" item in the fx chain at the top of the window and UNCHECK the Chroma Keyer tick box so it is temporarily disabled. You need the effect to be "off" when you are trying to get an eyedropper sample of the green-screen color. (If the Chroma Keyer effect is left on then it has already turned your greenscreen slightly transparent in the preview, so you can't get a good sample of it.)

4. If necessary move the pop-up window out of the way so you can see your preview window.

5. In the Chroma Keyer popup window, click once on the eyedropper icon at the lower left of the "spectrum" color area.

6. Move your mouse pointer to the preview window and now click and drag a rectangular area that contains only the green screen color. You have now shown Vegas a sample of what color it should turn transparent.

7. In the Chroma Keyer popup window, re-tick the Chroma Keyer function in the fx chain to re-enable it.

If you are working with a computer animated curtain effect that has a perfectly consistent color of green in it, you might be done at this point.

But if "extra stuff" also disappeared or if you are working with a real live greenscreen (or blue screen) footage, continue with step 8.

8. In the Chroma Keyer popup window, put a tick in the "Show Mask Only" item at the lower left of the window. This will make everything you want to "keep" (i.e. the curtains) turn white. You might also want to "solo" the video track or make sure there's nothing on the tracks below it so that the "transparent" sections of the mask show as a very black color (rather than showing your eventual background image).

9. Click and drag the "High Threshold" slider down (to the left) until you get a nice, solid white on the sections you want to *keep*. The green screen areas (which are supposed to go transparent) might still be a little milky looking at this point.

10. Click and drag the "Low Threshold" slider to the right until the green screen areas (which should go transparent) lose their milkiness and hopefully turn a very nice black.

11. You might want to add some blur (with the third slider) to smooth out the "chunkiness" of the mask.

12. Un-tick the "Show Mask Only" function, and un-solo the video track or move your background image back under it.

13. Don't expect Industrial Light and Magic results, but by tinkering you can do well enough with most chroma keys. One of the biggest limitations is std def DV footage. It might help to add some small amount of Chroma Blur (video fx) *ahead* of the Chroma Key function in the fx chain. As Eugenia suggests, high-def footage tends to look much better because of the higher resolution gives a much less "chunky" masking ability.