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Blue/Green screen setup...
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<blockquote data-quote="gazaly" data-source="post: 381240" data-attributes="member: 10197"><p><strong>Procedures: </strong></p><p>1. Screen should be no closer than 12-15 feet from the foreground. </p><p>2. Director of Photography should NOT use: Low Contrast, Fog, Diffusion, Super Frost</p><p>Filters or smoke when shooting blue/green screen. </p><p>3. Light up the blue/green screen and leave the foreground image in darkness.</p><p>This will give you the opportunity of visually inspecting where all the blue/green</p><p>spill occurs. Much of it will disappear when the foreground lights are on. </p><p>4. Check all angled and glossy surfaces for unintentional reflectance of the</p><p>blue/green screen. Spill can sometimes be canceled by applying lighting to the</p><p>offending area or cleaned up with dulling spray. </p><p>5. When the screen is lit, view the screen with a spot meter and check for</p><p>uniformity. The screen should be within 1/5 stop tolerances in all visible areas. I</p><p>like to add a 1/2 or full stop minus green (3308) as well to help. When the screen</p><p>is evenly lit, it pulls a better matte.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gazaly, post: 381240, member: 10197"] [B]Procedures: [/B] 1. Screen should be no closer than 12-15 feet from the foreground. 2. Director of Photography should NOT use: Low Contrast, Fog, Diffusion, Super Frost Filters or smoke when shooting blue/green screen. 3. Light up the blue/green screen and leave the foreground image in darkness. This will give you the opportunity of visually inspecting where all the blue/green spill occurs. Much of it will disappear when the foreground lights are on. 4. Check all angled and glossy surfaces for unintentional reflectance of the blue/green screen. Spill can sometimes be canceled by applying lighting to the offending area or cleaned up with dulling spray. 5. When the screen is lit, view the screen with a spot meter and check for uniformity. The screen should be within 1/5 stop tolerances in all visible areas. I like to add a 1/2 or full stop minus green (3308) as well to help. When the screen is evenly lit, it pulls a better matte. [/QUOTE]
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