I get down on my kness and bow to you in great reverence. You just saved this 60 year old a lot of social media heart pain. Laugh. Aweome just what I was looking for
You can do a lot without masking by adding a keyer to the upper layer and selecting a section of skin with the keyer's color box to choose the keying color. This is essentially a crude frequency separation. As you increase blur on the lower layer, you can see that the fine detail on areas with a different color (such as eyebrows, eyes and glasses, is retained. There is a limit on what you can do, but it works fairly well when you can't mask a large area as you did here.
@@Shredberry Yes. Makeup works for portions of a face, but for a large area, especially when showing a lot of skin, as in your video, the keyer works well. When I get caught up on things, I'll publish a video.
Just stumbled upon this video and first I'd like to say thank you! Just a couple of questions! What if you have a 25-minute video that needs smooth skin? Is it the same process? Second, How do you go about saving the video you want to post? Since we had to duplicate the original video, how do you make cuts & then export? Will you be making edits & exporting two videos simultaneously?
great vid, since it's been a year, has FCPX figured out how to follow the blemish point, so there's not need to adjust every frames? my issue is for video's where subject is talking and moving, any indication of this? thx
I get down on my kness and bow to you in great reverence. You just saved this 60 year old a lot of social media heart pain. Laugh. Aweome just what I was looking for
oh my gosh you are a god sent!!!! THANK YOU for dropping this gold!!
Amazing trick, thank you so much!
Happy to help!
thank so much for tutorial
Thank you! Looking fabulous!
Excellent Tip and trick! Thank you so much!!
Glad it was helpful!
Also, how do you do this for two people in the same video?
You can do a lot without masking by adding a keyer to the upper layer and selecting a section of skin with the keyer's color box to choose the keying color. This is essentially a crude frequency separation. As you increase blur on the lower layer, you can see that the fine detail on areas with a different color (such as eyebrows, eyes and glasses, is retained. There is a limit on what you can do, but it works fairly well when you can't mask a large area as you did here.
large area like my face that I need to blur for the entire duration? 🤣
@@Shredberry Yes. Makeup works for portions of a face, but for a large area, especially when showing a lot of skin, as in your video, the keyer works well. When I get caught up on things, I'll publish a video.
Just stumbled upon this video and first I'd like to say thank you! Just a couple of questions! What if you have a 25-minute video that needs smooth skin? Is it the same process? Second, How do you go about saving the video you want to post? Since we had to duplicate the original video, how do you make cuts & then export? Will you be making edits & exporting two videos simultaneously?
Awesome! Thank you!
Thanks for watching!
Thank-you SOOOOO much for this video!! SOO helpful!!!!
great vid, since it's been a year, has FCPX figured out how to follow the blemish point, so there's not need to adjust every frames? my issue is for video's where subject is talking and moving, any indication of this? thx
What a great trick!!!!
Thanks perfect trick :)
Thanks a lot
Thank you
now imagine doing this for a 10 minute video where model actually moves not sits in one place!
ONLY useful if your video is 24 frames long!