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Tuesday, May 21 2013 @ 08:53 AM EDT GreenScreen Versus RotoBrushPlease take a moment to watch GreenScreenCinema's latest release: "Gingerlicious". While "Gingerlicious" is the story of two gingerbread cookies in search of a new home, it's also a demonstration of the three most powerful matte effects found in Adobe After Effects CS5: color key, color range and rotobrush.
The most important piece of advice I can give you in regard to rotobrush is to make absolutely sure you like the effect before you "freeze" the effect. Once you click "freeze" the following things will occur:
1) The entire set of frames will be recalculated. You will slowly lose your mind as you watch your hours of work get undone by any changes made to the early frames.
2) The controls that allow you to tweak the effect will be disabled. You will no longer be able to "invert foreground/background" for example. This will also cause you to lose your mind when you realize how much time you just wasted preparing the effect when you still need to smooth the edges.
You can "unfreeze" the frames to gain access to the controls once more, but you will inevitably need to "freeze" the frames again in order to complete the shot. As a result the statistical chance of losing your mind goes up each time you try to improve the rotobrush result. If you take a close look at the final "Gingerlicious" shot with the dog and the gingerbread cookie you'll see the sloppy matte that comes from simply wanting to keep your sanity.
In the end there's really no comparison between keying and rotobrush effects. The keying effects in "Gingerlicious" (the first dog shot and all the other gingerbread shots) took just a few seconds to set up. The rotobrush effects (the final two dog shots) took about 8 hours each. Once Adobe gets rotobrush weaned from whatever hallucinogenic they raised it on they might have another hit on their hands. But for now it should only be used as a last resort: a glimmer of hope for those dark moments when all other matte effects fail.
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