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Screen Replacement in After Effects

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Although we’re primarily motion graphics artists, After Effects has an ever-growing number of tools that makes what used to be considered visual effects (VFX) jobs easier for folks like us to perform. Adobe has been making great strides to automate large portions of these tasks, but the reality is that you still need to know how to use these tools properly – plus add in some elbow grease of your own – to get them to work as well as you might expect.

A common visual effects task that editors or motion graphics artists will often be asked to perform is to replace one computer (or cell phone, tablet, or television) screen with another. Similar types of shots include replacing the poster on the side of a bus or building, replacing a picture on a wall in a home or office, etc.

This is a typical screen replacement shot: The camera was hand-held so everything was moving, and the actor’s hands are in front of the screen.
Clip CL113H courtesy Artbeats.com

This job demand has become so common, Chris created a Screen Replacement with After Effects and mocha AE course for lynda.com that stepped through the above procedure. It includes the most in-depth Roto Brush training we’ve created yet, including creating multiple Base Frames, making tricky corrective strokes around blurry objects, and optimizing the Roto Brush Matte parameters to create a cleaner composite.

For those who don’t have a lynda.com subscription (click here to get a free 7-day trial), we’ve also written about the main components before up here on PVC:

The nice thing about tools such as mocha AE, Roto Brush & Refine Edge, Warp Stabilizer VFX, and the 3D Camera Tracker is that Adobe is building into After Effects visual effects tools that used to cost extra to purchase. Fortunately, they’ve also been making them easy enough for non-VFX artists to use them for simple tasks – as long as you’re willing to carve out a few hours up front to learn them.

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