A sampling of tutorials, scripts, demos, and more.
Here’s another summary of the last week or so of news on After Effects—with assorted tutorials, scripts, demos, documentaries, and more.
Grenade Throw! by Video Copilot builds a super-slow motion grenade-throw entirely inside of AE with green screen footage. Andrew Kramer use 2D tracking on a camera to match a nodal pan and simulate camera depth of field, and presents additional ideas on capturing moments in super-slow motion. Here’s a variation of the finished product by ieatsushieveryday:
Framecurve has launched an effort to develop a standard interchange format for speedramps or timewarp effects, and they’re offering AE scripts if you’re trying to exchange speed ramp between top apps.
Mamoworld demoed more iExpressions, including Distribute 3D Random. Here’s a sample of what layer placement iExpressions can do:
On AE-List @ media-motion.tv, Jack Tunnicliffe posted an example of frame rate smoothing and frames restoration/interpolation of missing frames using pt_FrameRestorer from Paul Tuersley and AE Scripts. It’s a good example; here’s the offical demo:
Adam Everett Miller showed How To Make A Wiggling Cord From Particles using a wiggling emitter to create the illusion of a single cord moving, & add shading, motion blur, and shadow to add realism:
In Tech Demo: Windows 7 64 bit, MacBook Air,Thunderbolt, and Premiere Pro, Dave Helmly took a quick look at some Thunderbolt solutions, an Apple MacBook Air 13” running Windows 7 64-bit via Boot Camp, with an active Thunderbolt port connected to Sonnet Chassis, and a RED Rocket installed delivering full 4K playback on ultra lightweight notebook. One wag claims this “concept proves with enough RAM and a powerful processor, Thunderbolt could enable even the current-generation MacBooks to soon replace the Mac Pro altogether.” An earlier take on Thunderbolt by Helmly is also below. Can’t wait for his comparison testing to CUDA.
Does democratized culture mean better art or is true talent instead drowned out? This is one question addressed by PressPausePlay, a documentary film containing interviews with some of the world’s most influential creators of the digital era.
Also via PetaPixel is Ansel Adams: A Documentary Film from PBS. Here’s some of what Adams saw in the range of light in 1923:
It was one of those mornings where the sunlight is burnished with the keen wind and long feathers of cloud moved in a lofty sky. The silver light turned every blade of grass and every particle of sand into a luminous, metallic splendor. There was nothing, however small, that did not clash in the bright wind, that did not send arrows of light through the glassy air. I was suddenly arrested in the long, crunching path of the ridge by an exceedingly pointed awareness of the light. The moment I paused, the full impact of the mood was upon me. I saw more clearly than I’ve ever seen before or since the minute detail of the grasses, the small flotsam of the forest, the motion of the high clouds, streaming above the peaks. I dreamed that for a moment time stood quietly and the vision became but the shadow of an infinitely greater world. And I had within the grasp of consciousness a transcendental experience. (after 24:00)
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