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  • Welcome to Final Cut Pro X in under 5 minutes. I’m Steve from RippleTraining.com. In this

  • episode, I’m going to show you how to use the automatic options built into Final Cut

  • Pro’s keyer to get great results from your green-screened subjects.

  • It’s the season for wearing silly costumes, and my son Andy found this inflatable suit

  • that makes him look like a...giant grape.

  • Here he’s doing some of his dub-step moves in front of a 10x10 chromakey green painted

  • wall. If you’d like to know what paint I use, there’s a link in the description section below.

  • I connected an audition clip containing some images of a vineyard to be used as the background.

  • Before you apply a keyer effect, you should remove any area in the frame that won’t

  • be part of the final composite to make it easier for the keyer to evaluate the image

  • and give you a good key right out of the box.

  • Here, we see part of the set at the right and left edges of the frame. I’ll press

  • Shift-C to call up the crop tool, then crop out the unwanted pixels. If your subject moves,

  • make sure to scrub over your clip to ensure the cropping won't be cutting off some of

  • your subject.

  • For the next step, I’ll park the playhead over the greenscreen clip and open the Effects

  • Browser. I’ll locate the Keyer in the Keying category then skim over the thumbnail to see

  • a preview. Instantly, we can see some problems with the lighting in the scene. The dark spot

  • indicates an area where the light was too close to the wall. You can also see this hot-spot

  • by skimming over the clip.

  • I’ll apply the effect by dragging it onto the clip. The keyer begins its work of knocking

  • out most of the green pixels, giving us a very rough composite. In the Inspector, reveal

  • the Keyer controls. Be default, Final Cut Pro applies an automatic keyer by choosing

  • the best range of green pixels from which to create the key.

  • With the strength slider at 100, full automatic keying is applied, and with the strength slider

  • set at 0, no keying is applied. In my experience, leaving this slider at 100% is the best starting

  • place to begin making improvements to the key.

  • The first place to begin when evaluating your key is the matte view. The matte view is helpful

  • because it shows you which pixels are opaque, which ones are transparent, and which ones

  • are semi-transparent.

  • The white areas are the opaque pixels, the areas where no background shows through. The

  • black areas are the transparent pixels, the areas where the background completely shows

  • through, and the gray areas are where some of the background shows through.

  • To achieve a good key you want as much of your subject in white, and as much of your background

  • in black, and the edges surrounding your subject in gray to create a smooth transition between

  • the subject and the background. But right now there is too much gray in the background

  • and it needs to be removed.

  • To refine the key, click the Sample color button, then drag out a box over the area

  • of gray pixels. Instantly, the area becomes black. This is what you want the key to look

  • like, a black and white cut-out of your subject.

  • Even though the key looks good on a single frame, it’s a good idea to skim over the

  • entire clip because if your lighting changes, youll need to drag out more samples.

  • To view the composite, click the composite button. The key look pretty good, but Andy

  • could use some more blending around the edges to bring out the detail in his hair.

  • I’ll switch back to the matte view.

  • To see the detail in your matte, youll want to zoom in and re-adjust the image in

  • the viewer.

  • Click the Edges button, then click and drag across the matte boundary. You'll see detail

  • begin to return to the edges. You can adjust the middle handle to create more or less softening

  • around the edges. If you drag too far, youll be adding too much transparency to the core

  • matte. Just drag enough until you see some of the hair detail return, then back it off.

  • Additionally, you can move the start and end points of the edges control to achieve different

  • variations in your edge transitions. You can also add more than one edges option to your

  • matte so you can have one smoothing for hair and another for hands and fingers for example.

  • If you like the edge detail, but find there are still too many gray pixels in your matte,

  • you can use the fill holes slider to knock out the transparency while maintaining the

  • soft edges you worked hard to achieve.

  • Let’s take a look at the composite.

  • That looks great.

  • One other feature that I use to improve the key is Light Wrap. Using this slider, the

  • transparent edge pixels are blended with the background pixels to achieve a more organic

  • key. Notice when I drag the amount slider, the edges are picking up the green foliage

  • in the background image.

  • Earlier I mentioned that I use an Audition clip for various backgrounds. Now youll

  • see why. Playing the clip back, then pressing control-option-left arrow let’s me cycle

  • through each background to try out each one with the dub-stepping grape.

  • If youre interested in learning more about keying, checkout our Compositing in Final

  • Cut Pro X tutorial on our website.

Welcome to Final Cut Pro X in under 5 minutes. I’m Steve from RippleTraining.com. In this

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