Tim Bickford
June 25th, 2008, 01:54 PM
This may be obvious to most of you. However, I wanted to share this to perhaps help someone else in a similar predicament. I also wanted to see if anyone else has had a different solution.
I recently shot a skit for a "spoof" commercial. It was shot in a kitchen. In one shot the actor is standing in front of a black "side by side" refrigerator. I did not notice during the shoot... but there was a dent in one of the two doors about a foot from the actors head. The dent showed up like a sore thumb in the video. A re-shoot was out of the question.
Fortunately it was a tripod shot and at no time during the shot did the actor or any part of her body move in front of the dent. So... I took one frame shot of the scene and had a Photoshop proficient buddy fix the dent. I then used an 8 point garbage matte in P-Pro CS3 on the photo-shopped image to key out the part where only the good video would play underneath. I simply laid the video track under the matte. Presto... when the video is played you would never know the dent was there.
Any similar experiences? I'm guessing I'm not the first to do this.
I recently shot a skit for a "spoof" commercial. It was shot in a kitchen. In one shot the actor is standing in front of a black "side by side" refrigerator. I did not notice during the shoot... but there was a dent in one of the two doors about a foot from the actors head. The dent showed up like a sore thumb in the video. A re-shoot was out of the question.
Fortunately it was a tripod shot and at no time during the shot did the actor or any part of her body move in front of the dent. So... I took one frame shot of the scene and had a Photoshop proficient buddy fix the dent. I then used an 8 point garbage matte in P-Pro CS3 on the photo-shopped image to key out the part where only the good video would play underneath. I simply laid the video track under the matte. Presto... when the video is played you would never know the dent was there.
Any similar experiences? I'm guessing I'm not the first to do this.