Let me clarify the issue
here............
They are offering the choice of
either
blue or green screens with a selection
of CD's
that have various backgrounds you can
drop
your subject
onto.............
That is what I was wondering if anyone
has used........
Feed a Cat... Starve a
Fever........
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, April 20, 2006 2:10
PM
Subject: Re: It isn't easy being
Green............................
If you're going to shoot an image that needs to be dropped into another
background, make the shooting background as close as you can to the final
image.
A green screen is for video where the chroma is selected and
electronically made to dissappear. the green screen must be evenly and well
illuminated. The subject must contain nothing that is similar in colour to the
green screen and then the new background must be quite bright to burn through
the edges.
As I say, if you know that you'll be dropping the subject into to a white
background, shoot on a white background and make a layer mask.
herschel rebphoto <rebphoto@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Hi
Gang.............
Yesterday I was wandering around on the Web
Site of Owens Originals Back Drops and saw some interesting Green Screen
set ups.
low rates.
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