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Transparent layers?

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Transparent layers?
by Mike Myers on Jul 19, 2008 at 5:23:10 pm

I have a composition with several solid color layers with one masking another for a lower 3rd. I also have some text with Glow and Particle world applied to it. Is there a way i can render out just the text or maybe even the text with the mask around it? The only way i can figure it out is to render the whole composition and use a garbage mask in premiere. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

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Re: Transparent layers?
by Mike Clasby on Jul 19, 2008 at 8:29:42 pm

Turn off the eyeballs of the layers you don't want in the render, so that what you see on the screen is what you want, the black background being an alpha or transparent.

"Ctrl M", brings up the Render Que (don't use, File>Export, its too limited), then double click the Codec shown for "Output Module" (in blue, Lossless is the usual default), this brings up the Output Module Settings.

Select a Codec, Format>Quicktime Movie, (Animation is a good one, its lossless). Video Format>Output Options to choose "Animation". Then in that box for "Compressor" choose "Millions of Colors+ ".

That + is the important thing, it means you'll have Alpha. No +, no Alpha.

Now the Depth box should say millions of colors+, and when you render you're good.

Several Codecs support Million of Colors+, png, Targa, more, so you don't have to use the Animation Codec, you just need that +.



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Re: Transparent layers?
by Mike Myers on Jul 20, 2008 at 4:33:27 am

Thanks for the detailed post. That did exactly what I needed it to do.



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Re: Transparent layers?
by Chris Wright on Jul 20, 2008 at 8:20:49 am

may i suggest straight alphas, (not premultiplied) so that the color values separate from the transparency values. This way there is no blending with a background color. Less chance of an ugly result from a character generator in lower third or something. but quicktime player won't like it :)

Maybe this is why so many people are getting color problems, they aren't interpreting straight alphas in AE imports. Engage opacity and watch the video blow up as the background plate shines through. weeee!



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