After Effects vs. Nuke for Compositing

After Effects vs. Nuke for Compositing

School of Motion via YouTube Direct link

Joey Korenman : So all of these are feeding from the same set of image sequences here, and I'm using this effect. It's in the 3d channel group extractor to pull each of those channels out one at a ti…

4 of 6

4 of 6

Joey Korenman : So all of these are feeding from the same set of image sequences here, and I'm using this effect. It's in the 3d channel group extractor to pull each of those channels out one at a ti…

Class Central Classrooms beta

YouTube videos curated by Class Central.

Classroom Contents

After Effects vs. Nuke for Compositing

Automatically move to the next video in the Classroom when playback concludes

  1. 1 Music : [intro music]
  2. 2 Joey Korenman : What's up guys, Joey here at school of motion.com. And in this video, we are going to talk about one of my favorite topics, which is nuke. And what I'm going to try and do is show you…
  3. 3 Joey Korenman : And what I have here is a pretty typical 3d composite setup where I've rendered out multiple passes from cinema 4d. I've rendered them as a multipass EXR file. So I have one set of fi…
  4. 4 Joey Korenman : So all of these are feeding from the same set of image sequences here, and I'm using this effect. It's in the 3d channel group extractor to pull each of those channels out one at a ti…
  5. 5 Joey Korenman : Just these bars that go across. And if I really want to look at all of my passes and try to understand what I have to work with to, to help myself figure out how to composite these th…
  6. 6 Joey Korenman : But once I did, it is so much nicer to composite 3d passes together and really control the way your image looks in nuke. So the first thing you're probably noticing is I've got all of…

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.