Getting excellent chromakey greenscreen with Premiere Pro CS3 with examples and a sample clip.
Check out the very good keyed clip below then I'll discuss how I did it and what's wrong with it and how to correct it to get it just perfect.
Here are three format versions of the same clip. Right-click to "Save Target As..." download.
http://hv20.info/yopu/1080p_5.mov (16,643 KB)
http://hv20.info/yopu/720p_5.mov (11,247 KB)
http://hv20.info/yopu/540p_5b.flv (2,277 KB)
I used just two effects: Color Key and Change Color.
Here is the greenscreen video capture. Be sure your greenscreen is flat with no wrinkles and evenly lit. Don't overlight it because it
could reflect green light onto your subject. And don't let the lights you use to illuminate the greenscreen illuminate any part of your
subject. Do not have frizzy hair or fuzzy edges because it makes a clean key impossible. I stand about 6 feet in front of the screen.
Here is the keyed video capture. I apply the Color Key by sliding the color tolerance until I reduce the green color to the smallest
halo around the subject without eliminating any data or as little data as possible: data is detail. Adjust the edge thin and feather to taste.
Here is the color change video capture. Color Change gives you several options. Leave Matching at 15%. Then experiment with the
other adjustments. I got the best results with Match Colors Using Hue. My objective was to get rid of that green color in the hair and
around the shoulders while looking for a color that would complement nicely with my background image.
And finally here is the composited video capture.
If you look closely at the video as I turn my head to my left you can see the greenscreen green light reflected on my face. This can be
eliminated with color correction. Or just don't turn the face or keep your greenscreen illumination subdued.
That hair! I just got a crew cut. Or you might just want to wear a hat or use a tube of Brill Cream and grease it back. Keep all of your
edges tight smooth clean. Then you can increase the color tolerance even more giving a tight green halo while keeping all of the detail.
This is good. You might eliminate the halo altogether and get a perfect key.
You may notice that there is a thin white halo around the subject. This is primarily due to not being able to reduce the halo more because
of the hair. But some of it may be due to the greenscreen lights illuminating the left side of the subject. This should be noticeable on the
left side of the face. This light is coming from behind and from the left. So use pieces of cardboard if needed to keep this light off of
the subject.
There's always more but this is a good start. So if I think of anything else I'll post it here in this thread.
JM![]()


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