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You film in a dark room, with paper covering up your lamp to make it dim, or you can do it while editing with brightness.
thanks
Also make sure you don't put paper over a lamp that gets extremely hot.
In my opinion its a bad idea to take a picture in the dark. It's much easier just to darken it in post.
I agree with greenscreener studios, animate the scene normally and then digitally darken the scene, that way you get a mutch better quality video and you have a wide range of choices in which you could do with the scene.
You could bring down your exposure and gain a bit. That normally works for me. I guess it depends on how dark you want it though.
what do you mean in post?
Post is when you're in the process of editing the pictures/footage to just took in a program like Vegas or After Effects.
I agree with greenscreener studios, animate the scene normally and then digitally darken the scene, that way you get a mutch better quality video and you have a wide range of choices in which you could do with the scene.
i dont know how to do that, i dont have a program that can do that, can you help?
You might be able to use wax I'm really not sure, I've never used the program my self
Daniel Sitch wrote:I agree with greenscreener studios, animate the scene normally and then digitally darken the scene, that way you get a mutch better quality video and you have a wide range of choices in which you could do with the scene.
i dont know how to do that, i dont have a program that can do that, can you help?
You could use Sony Vegas or After Effects
YEAH, Buy a + $500 program to make a scene darker! Brilliant!
Oops, wrong sony vegas
flchorton wrote:Daniel Sitch wrote:I agree with greenscreener studios, animate the scene normally and then digitally darken the scene, that way you get a mutch better quality video and you have a wide range of choices in which you could do with the scene.
i dont know how to do that, i dont have a program that can do that, can you help?
You could use Sony Vegas or After Effects
sry i dont have those?
Here's an idea:
Just turn the contrast up. Works pretty well. Dim the lights also for a better effect.
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