![]() Where was it built? can you go back to that source and put it on a transparent bg. Glenn Sakatch wrote:really your character animation should have been built with an alpha in the first place. So, unless there are other tricks I don't know about, this all seems to be boiling down to a simple question of how to properly create an alpha channel such that I can then use an erase brush to erase any part of the video of my choosing. Both of these methods keep the black lines, but you can see the color background through his body.Ĭoloring in his body is out of the question. I've also tried a transform/Lumakey in Fusion, but again that removes background and body. But that of course removes BOTH the background AND the figure's body. The closest I've come to removing the background is by adding an alpha channel in the Color edit, and going through directions there. Then I go back to Fusion and try using the erase brush with the Paint node, and nothing ever happens. I find that (I forget which) and click on "add alpha channel" in the menu. I tried to render/convert to a format that allows for an alpha channel. And that's where I'm stumped.Īs I understand it I must have an alpha channel in the video to even THINK of erasing anything. So then I tried to find various ways to erase, the thought being that at least erasure, with a stylus, might prove to be easier than pushing all those path points around. Which is to say, I made the polygon mask on frame 1, and then painstakingly moved it for each subsequent frame as the figure moves.Īlthough as an animator I'm used to painstaking work, I found that very difficult to do, especially when I realized I would be doing this for hundreds of frames for the final work. ![]() And I've done this as an experiment for a very very short clip, of around 20 frames. I started off, in Fusion, making a polygon mask around the outline of his body. The problem is how to "cut out" the figure so that only his body appears but not any of the white background outside of his white body. It's hard to explain but suffice to say it is in color and fills up what will be the background. I'm trying to place him against other "stuff" I've created. That "background" includes the figure's body. I made an animation that is just black lines against white background. I'm learning Resolve inch by inch as I need various features. I'm a humble animator, using Resolve largely as an editor. Please excuse me in advance if this comes across as a ridiculously stupid question.
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