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One-On-One Visual Effects Compositing Workshop
with Shake 4.1
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As a senior compositor with literally hundreds of visual
effects shots for feature films and broadcast
television commercials, I have also done a great deal of training for
VFX facilities, classes, and workshops around the world. I
am now offering a personal
workshop for digital artists that would like to take advantage
of those years of production experience to advance their
own careers in visual effects compositing. This workshop
will equip
you with the core competencies for professional visual effects
compositing – bluescreen compositing, compositing cgi,
photorealistic composites, and rotoscoping. Future workshops
will offer training on even more topics.
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While
the workshop is conducted with Shake 4.1, the training emphasis
is on technique,
which is NOT found
in any manual. Expert technique is only gained after years
of production experience on hundreds of shots. Now that Apple
has dropped the price of Shake to an incredible $499 it has
exploded in popularity. Once you demonstrate a command of
Shake, a premier node-based compositor, any employer will
accept that
you can master their node-based compositor, even if it is
not Shake. This is not true if your experience is only with
a layer-based
compositor, such as Adobe After Effects.
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One-on-One Tutoring
The
main feature of this workshop is the one-on-one personal tutoring
you get in addition to QuickTime movie tutorials, prepared
Shake scripts, and project media. After you turn in each assignment
we get together on Skype (voice over Internet) to discuss your
work, answer any questions, make suggestions, and offer tips
- all specific to your needs. It’s like having a senior
VFX compositing instructor at your side.
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Tutorials
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Shake Scripts
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Project Media
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One-on-One
Tutoring
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How It Works
The
workshop is designed as an eight week course. Of course, you
may go at your own pace. If you want to complete all eight
weeks in eight days, so be it. You download each week’s
videos, prepared Shake scripts and project media, then go through
them at your own pace. They are designed so that you can “play
along” with Shake on your own workstation. After viewing
the week’s video tutorials there is an “assignment” video
that briefs you on the week’s training exercises where
you apply what you have learned to the project media that is
provided. You then upload your assignment Shake script to my
website and we review it together over Skype. Each week’s
lesson should take you from three to five hours to complete.
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Who Should Take This Workshop
This
workshop is intended for digital artists serious about visual
effects compositing that are already familiar with Shake. It
assumes that you have already completed basic Shake training
and are ready to learn how to use it effectively for compositing
professional visual effects shots. It is the perfect program
for someone starting out in visual effects compositing or moving
up from Adobe After Effects.
If
you need to learn Shake before taking this workshop, then I
have two alternatives to recommend
to you. First, you could take my Shake 4.1 Essentials on-line
training course available on Lynda.com.
If you prefer to own the DVD, the same content is also available
on Amazon.com.
And since you can download a free 30
day evaluation copy of Shake, these two training alternatives
provide an incredibly low cost way to advance your visual effects
career by learning Shake’s powerful node-based compositing.
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Price
The
cost is only $500 for
the entire personal workshop. You get almost 7 hours of great
tutorial videos, prepared Shake scripts, project media, and
a total of four hours of personal one-on-one tutoring. This
is an average of a half hour of personal tutoring for each
weekly lesson. The only other thing you will need a USB headset
and a Skype account. A USB headset can be had for as little
as $19.99 and Skype can be downloaded for free.
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Satisfaction Guaranteed
If
you decide that this workshop is not right for you upon completion
of the first week’s tutorials, then I will give you a
full refund of all your money. No questions asked.
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How to Sign Up
Use
the contact button below to let me know you would like to start
your personal VFX compositing workshop. I will send you a PayPal
invoice for easy online payment and follow up with the download
information for the first week’s material. You could
be working on advancing your visual effects career tomorrow!


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A current One-on-One Workshop student
has this to say:
It
was very nice and useful talking to you. You have a gift: it
is
to explain
things
in
a very
understandable
way, and for a stranger
like me it is very useful to hear you talking "clearly".
And of course the way you explain it is beautiful, as beautiful
as this fascinating subject I want to master.
I think I will attend your advanced composite course in Maine,
too, so I will be able to meet you there.
Thank you again and ciao!
- Valerio
Trento, Italy
The Workshop Classes
Here is an overview of the topics covered each week, plus
a sneak
preview of one of the videos from each week. Just click on
the video
icons to play. These previews are low resolution, while the
actual
tutorials are 1024 x 768. The total runtime of the video tutorials
for all eight weeks is 6 hours and 48 minutes.
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Week One:
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Working with Keyers |
7 Movies |
runtime: 66 minutes |
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Bluescreen and greenscreen compositing are
the bread and butter of digital compositing. Explore Shake’s
different keyer technologies by working with Keylight, Primatte,
and the ChromaKeyer on a variety of problems to compare results.
Learn their strengths and weakness and when to use which.
Understand the despill operation and its inherent artifacts. |
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Week Two:
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Working Outside the Keyer
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8 Movies
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runtime: 80 minutes
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The sales brochure aside, you can never just
plug a bluescreen into the keyer and dial in a professional
composite. You invariably must help the keyer by using a number
of strategies that include pre-processing the bluescreen and
devising clever divide and conquer strategies. Learn the secrets
of pulling multiple keys and combining them in your own composite
outside of the keyer. |
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Week Three:
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Compositing CGI
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6 Movies
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runtime: 37 minutes
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A great deal of the work in digital compositing
is to composite CGI (3D animation). The modern digital compositor
must know how to work with multi-pass CGI renders as well as
multi-plane compositing. Learn why color correcting the CGI
elements must be done using the unpremultiplied version even
though the CGI is delivered premultiplied. |
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Week Four:
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Photorealistic Color Correction
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6 Movies
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runtime: 53 minutes
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Whether compositing CGI or bluescreen elements,
a key step in a professional digital composite is to color
correct the various layers so that they all appear to have
been filmed together. Develop a methodical step-by-step procedure
to guarantee photorealism in your composites plus the “constant
green” method of color adjustment that leaves brightness
undisturbed. |
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Week Five:
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Convincing Composites
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5 Movies
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runtime: 51 minutes
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Color correcting the layers of a composite is
merely the first step towards achieving a convincing composite.
All of the other layer attributes must also be convincingly
matched which include lens effects, grain and noise matching,
depth of field, shadows, edge blending, and light wrap effects. |
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Week Six:
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Rotoscoping
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6 Movies
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runtime: 28 minutes
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Rotoscoping is a core skill in digital compositing
and indeed may be the first job a new compositor gets. Learn
about spline-based rotoscoping, how to choose the appropriate
keyframe strategy, articulated rotos, creating motion blur,
and how to do a quality inspection of your finished roto to
find your mistakes before the boss does. |
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Week
Seven:
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Massive Matte
Methods
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6
Movies
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runtime:
46 minutes
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In every composite you will need to isolate
one or more objects with a matte for special treatment – color
correction, a blur, you name it. Learn multiple methods of
creating a matte designed to fit any situation – lumakey,
chromakey, the difference matte, the color difference matte,
garbage mattes, and how to “roll your own”. Being
able to quickly create a clever matte can save you hours
of rotoscoping. |
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Week
Eight:
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Working with
Video
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6
Movies
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runtime:
45 minutes
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Most digital compositors will be working with
video, which brings its own long list of issues to the table.
Learn how to de-interlace video (and when you don’t
have to!), how to cope with non-square pixels, when and how
to perform
a 3:2 pullup and how to put it back with a 3:2 pulldown.
Learn tips, tricks, and techniques for coping with the 4:2:2
color
sampling of video. |
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