Features
- Compositing basics
- How to use the Nuke interface
- Rotoscoping and color keying
- Adding VFX elements to a live-action shot
- Seamlessly integrating digital backgrounds
Nuke for beginners: compositing
The demand for highly skilled, talented compositors is rising along with the VFX business. Learning Nuke, the most well-known digital compositing package for visual effects, has never been more advantageous.
The most widely used vfx compositing programme available today is called NUKE. Learn why everyone relies on NUKE to make the seemingly impossible possible and to improve the appearance of their work, from the greatest film vfx studio to small motion graphics firms.
One of the riskiest and most complex phases of the visual effects process is compositing. Compositors are given a tremendous level of control over assets (both three dimensional and two dimensional), even if it technically occurs during the finishing steps of a picture. Compositing is the process of combining the works of multiple artists into a single, cohesive piece, using techniques like chroma keying, advanced tracking, and placement.
Course Features
- Lectures 0
- Quizzes 0
- Duration 10 hours
- Skill level All levels
- Language English
- Students 27
- Assessments Yes