Green screen studio


ansonteoh

New Member
Hi guys,

Do you where do get a green screen studio in town?
i need to do a video shooting for a project that required a green screen studio..

Thanks

Regards
Anson
 

Hi guys,

Do you where do get a green screen studio in town?
i need to do a video shooting for a project that required a green screen studio..

Thanks

Regards
Anson

no idea, would like to know too, but u can always juz find a screen of another colour, juz make sure the colors of ur subject and backgrd are contrasting
 

I own a studio and can provide you with green or blue screen as well.
However, my studio is not in town.
Do let me know your requirements and will see if I can help you.
Pix can be found at www.vmcmedia.com.sg

Cheers!
 

in order of size
camwerkz
studio on third
raycine
bert lighting house

they will all paint their studios green for u for a fee
 

When shooting green screen in a studio, it is important to note if the studio has good audio proofing or at least be relatively noiseless, if dialogue/interview recording is required. A studio is useless for an interview if it has everything visually acceptable but unusable audio due to ambient noise...
 

get out of the mindset that green-screens have to be done in studios. :D
I've serviced quite a number of visual effects work and basic keying shoots with on-location screen setups.

All you need are C-stands, autopoles, sandbags, CSO green/blue backdrops, sufficient lighting, a good DP and effects supervisor. ;)
 

get out of the mindset that green-screens have to be done in studios. :D
I've serviced quite a number of visual effects work and basic keying shoots with on-location screen setups.

All you need are C-stands, autopoles, sandbags, CSO green/blue backdrops, sufficient lighting, a good DP and effects supervisor. ;)

depends on the shot size your're shooting i guess.

increasingly people are using white as a chroma backdrop. if u're using a high end camera a "white screen" might save u some money having the studio paint the cyc green. just watch your highlights. and use luma key in post imstead of chroma or colour key
 

Then your eyeballs are going to be keyed out, and all your specular highlights will be keyed out also, then you do more work in post animating mattes and painstakingly do rotoscoping.

Why do all the extra work when u can do it right in the first place?
 

white as chroma backdrop? Photo izzit? Rotoscoping is also $$$.
 

Then your eyeballs are going to be keyed out, and all your specular highlights will be keyed out also, then you do more work in post animating mattes and painstakingly do rotoscoping.

Why do all the extra work when u can do it right in the first place?


not necessarily, i've seen it work before with really clean results, with an Ex-3 no less. the problem with shooting in a green studio in sg is that not many of them are big enough to shoot a scene with 6-8 talents without getting the green tint reflecting on your talents skin. theres not enough separation from the green backdrop. white eliminates that quite alot, and a well lit white backdrop will definitely be alot brighter then the whites of your talents eyes or even the specular highlights.

anyway just my two cents worth

ts should state what kinda shots you're looking to get.
 

Oh yeah... with after effects cs5 out.... maybe..... just maybe.... it is the beginning of the end of green/blue screens.

Watch this video by Adobe to see what I am talking about:

Adobe After Effects CS5 - Rotoscope with Rotobrush
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYgfDUnA1Ys

My jaw drops when the Adobe evangelist demonstrated it during the CS5 launch at Suntec.

I haven't got my hand on CS5 so I don't know much but looking at the video, I really begin to wonder if we will still need a green screen/blue screen in a few years' time.
 

Actually, in today's technology and how consumers are able to gain access to the capabilities of what used to be available only for larger studios, you can do whatever you want in post to fix up things...but if you can do it right in the first place during shoots, why waste time in post?

Everyone wanna fix things up in post, but everyone's got no budget for post.... :nono:
 

Oh yeah... with after effects cs5 out.... maybe..... just maybe.... it is the beginning of the end of green/blue screens.

Watch this video by Adobe to see what I am talking about:

Adobe After Effects CS5 - Rotoscope with Rotobrush
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYgfDUnA1Ys

My jaw drops when the Adobe evangelist demonstrated it during the CS5 launch at Suntec.

I haven't got my hand on CS5 so I don't know much but looking at the video, I really begin to wonder if we will still need a green screen/blue screen in a few years' time.

woah that rotobrushing looks pretty awesome, first time i seen a tool like that
 

it's a pixel analysis feature similar to what used to be available only in high end color grading systems, eg. Da Vinci.
 

hah the colourist i used to use must be cheating me then hehe cos i never see him use it either.

fcp needs to pick up the pace
 

In color grading systems, when u selectively just pick out skin tones or the skies to perform a secondary grade, u r essentially using that feature. Similar to the magic wand but with motion analysis to track across the frames.
 

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