Yeah, I can be pretty lazy about the last one, or I don't decide on the backdrop until after I've done the key. Definitely just ups the quality to think about it ahead of time. Thanks for watching Luis!
Yours is the first green screen 'How To' that I have seen where the creator gave concrete info on what NOT to do. It's about time someone did that. Great job at putting together this type of video. I have watched all kinds of green screen videos that talk about all the pros of using green screen. However, no on talks about what kinds of problems you could run into while using a screen. Thanks for sharing.
Doing god's work here! What I liked the most about this tutorial was the information per minute, the pacing and the demo of everything you were telling. Very easy to keep up with the tips! :D Thanks fam!
The last tip is so crucial. I think another thing to add along with the last tip is to look at source lighting in your background. For instance, the beach background with the sun directed behind you would act as a backlight and create glowing edges around the subject (light wrapping). A useful method in getting the right light direction and quality on your keyed-in subject is reference lighting where you find an object within your background and reference its lighting shape and distance from the source light, such as how hard are the shadows. (ie. Do the shadows roll off or do they have a distinct line/cut-off between the exposed side and underexposed side?)
So I definitely wish I watched this video before posting my 4 green screen UA-cam videos! But this video was super helpful and I will use all your tips!! Even the snow.. now that’s a must!
I’m just getting into green screen filming (for miniatures) and this video has the best tips I have found so far, and I’ve watched a lot of videos on it. Well done.
This was super helpful. I’ve made all the mistakes you mentioned. The one that hit me most was the shutter speed. I’ve never even thought about that one. Thank you 🙏
Yeah, it can be an added work in the process, but if the shot has a lot of motion in it sometimes its the only thing I can do to make it look okay. Thanks for watching!
Cooler Flix Ltd : shure ! At least 100 ms shutter speed BUT in most cases you need extra lights...Yungnuo has some nice little led spots 👉🏼see some vids on my music channel👍🏾
Tip 5 is what makes the effect work in the end. You can have the most clean separation from the green screen but it will look fake if the lighting doesn’t match your background. Great video!
This was really helpful. I solved my issue my reducing my light from the front, as you mentioned, then also increasing a soft light behind. This gave my green screen a flatter and more balanced colour. Thanks for your help!
I just bought a green screen off Amazon for only $17.99 shipped to the house and I love the fact that you're suggesting getting stuff from thrift stores like how I've always done my whole life. That's awesome dude and thanks for the ideas so I don't make all those mistakes.
Use blue it is easier to key and it far more forgiving with less light spill. It really helps with close up shots where the luminosity of green will be hard to key in parts like hair and other hard to key areas however using blue your lighting has to be much more perfect
Good episode. Extra tip... Use a backlight on the subject to lessen bleed-through of green screen on hair. Works like a charm for most situations. Just place a light to the upper right or left of the green screen and point it at the subject. You’ll have to play around with placement and intensity to reach the desired effect.
Damnnnnnnnnnnn You nailed green screen. I wonder how come such a genius has only 42K subs? He deserves more than Million. I hope to see his sub count Million more while my journey goes on with Skyler Thomas. Allah bless you :)
I don't think I'll ever need to know any of this, but it was fun to learn it. There is a lot more to doing that well, even in a home setting, than I would have guessed!
0:39 1. UNEVEN LIGHTING (wrinkles, not even lighting, distance for not casting shadow) 2:05 2. LIGHT FALLOFF 3:03 3. SHUTTER SPEED 3:58 4. GREEN CLOTHES/TATTOOS 4:27 5. MATCHING the BACKGROUND
1:50 How is the shadow still there? How is the green behind the shadow removed without the shadow being removed with it? What app are you using here? Also, general question, how do you make the lighting on the green screen even while keeping the natural lighting?
I have a question. In some shots your green screen didn't cover the whole screen. I'm wondering how were you cover the entire background without having the green screen covering up the whole screen?
The actor stays in the area with the green screen behind them, that means the rest of the area is useless and they crop away everything outside of the green screen
Also, when the green reflection is falling on your specs. You May be, seeing tree or greenary or reflection of green screen falling on window glass in front of you
I bodged it for sure. It was primarily a black dress and so I did my best to create an alpha mask and put a black solid behind it. It worked, but I'm never doing that again lol.
I've been in that situation where you can't reshoot, so you just spend countless hours trying to make something acceptable in post. Definitely not a fun situation to be in.
I wish I had watched this video last year when I was working on a green screen project for school. The chroma key was all off... In my defense, I had no experience whatsoever with editing or using chroma key and the program I was using didn't help...
Great video dude ! :) Very informative and useful ! Keep up the good work ! :D You should leave a 20s outro screen at the end, and put an end screen so you can recommend your other videos to viewers rather than them being given a page of random videos usually from other UA-camrs ! :) \o>
@@SkylerThomas No problem ! :) Good Luck ! You might also want to consider doing merch too for your fans :) It'll generate some income to help with providing even more content for your viewers ! :P I'm dropping Merch start of next year on my channel, already got a high demand for it and I'm only on almost 2,700 Subs ! :) \o>
Really good info, especially lighting the subject to match your final background. I'm using DaVinci and it's a learning process. Have only made one solid green screen clip out of about 17 attempts. BIG LEARNING PROCESS.
I think the best thing to do is just try to be creative in how you set up the green screen and get the shots to make the shots look as good as possible. Having the space and the equipment to make everything look perfect can be pretty tough, so I'd say just do your best for now and over time you'll see the quality on everything get better.
Thank you. Great video, very helpful. Minor point, I would do away with the music. I find it intrusive and because you have really good content to share, clear diction and a lively intonation, the music is not only superfluous, but for me, distracting.
Good info, but the noise, "music" in the background was way too distracting. I should make a video about the top 5 mistakes people make with their AUDIO.
OK I have a couple of green screens. The fabric one that you were showing I found so difficult and a pain to keep steaming and stretching that I opted for an 8 foot green roll of paper green screen. So much easier to work with and when the screen gets old or cruddy I just pull out some more fresh green from the roll. Love the video, great job, keep it short and to the point. Feel free to explain some more of that blend mode you used in Adobe Premiere to make the snow in the scene, that was awesome!
just subscribed. I've watched only two videos so far, but you are so concise and clear. I think it's amazing how much information you convey with so few words.
Thank you so much... I just switched to green screen and it was a nightmare, your tips really helpped. I am a new subscriber and hit the bell so I don't miss any of your videos, you're great!
This is an excellent almost tutorial! By explaining what not to do, you also show what to do. It would be kind of cool to insert myself into my gaming videos, now I understand what it would take to accomplish that.
Good tips, Some people don't have room to be able to light the green screen and then the subject, such as me, so shadows are inevitable, but like you said keep as far away as you can from it and that will help. Also I use to use cloth green screen but frankly it was a pain, so I went to popup green screen (the largest one). You can get them with green on one side and blue on the other, which comes in handy as some things you film don't look like it has green in them but when you key out you have problems. Sometimes you can correct it by using Screen Balance in AE keylight by turning it up or down. I went green screen because filming outside has a multitude of problems, weather just being one.
Yeah the pop up green screen must be nice. I should look into one. And there are a number of ways to play with the key if you're working with After Effects which is nice. It has definitely saved me in situations, but still best to to try and have the best conditions possible when shooting, if there is room. Thanks for checking out the video!
First rate > very easy to follow. I like seeing the mechanics of setting up th screen. My most common difficulty is even light on the screen . Previously I would carefully paint up large flat boards but I like the idea of a dyed green sheet stretched across. the snow in front of t character was excellent.
*Light Spill* Not falloff. My brain made an oopsie while making this video. Thanks for understanding. 🤷♂️
Which software is it??
O O P S I E D O O P S I E
High Quality work, as usual, good sir. Simple, straight forward, and enjoyable. Great job!
how did you made that dissolve effect
Er Rushikesh Patil premier pro
It's 4 AM, I don't even own a green screen, and I have a science presentation due tomorrow. Why am I watching this?
go to sleep
How did the presentation go?
Wtf! Don’t sleep!! Do your science presentation xD
@@SlimeBoyYT well, the presentation is over
Felipe Hdez pfft! Ok oops xD
This is actually one of the best green screen videos I've seen. Nobody actually explains the whole shutter speed things
The last tip is the best one. Matching the background is usually what I lack the most and what mostly gives it away. Thanks for the tips!
Yeah, I can be pretty lazy about the last one, or I don't decide on the backdrop until after I've done the key. Definitely just ups the quality to think about it ahead of time. Thanks for watching Luis!
@@SkylerThomas cardboard boxes
the new version of pr cc has a color match function pretty neat for that kind of issue
Yours is the first green screen 'How To' that I have seen where the creator gave concrete info on what NOT to do.
It's about time someone did that. Great job at putting together this type of video. I have watched all kinds of green screen videos that talk about all the pros of using green screen. However, no on talks about what kinds of problems you could run into while using a screen. Thanks for sharing.
Doing god's work here! What I liked the most about this tutorial was the information per minute, the pacing and the demo of everything you were telling. Very easy to keep up with the tips! :D Thanks fam!
For those of you doing the keying on AE, a good filter is "Advanced Spill Suppressor" which will take out the green spill.
The last tip is so crucial. I think another thing to add along with the last tip is to look at source lighting in your background. For instance, the beach background with the sun directed behind you would act as a backlight and create glowing edges around the subject (light wrapping). A useful method in getting the right light direction and quality on your keyed-in subject is reference lighting where you find an object within your background and reference its lighting shape and distance from the source light, such as how hard are the shadows. (ie. Do the shadows roll off or do they have a distinct line/cut-off between the exposed side and underexposed side?)
So I definitely wish I watched this video before posting my 4 green screen UA-cam videos! But this video was super helpful and I will use all your tips!! Even the snow.. now that’s a must!
I’m just getting into green screen filming (for miniatures) and this video has the best tips I have found so far, and I’ve watched a lot of videos on it. Well done.
This was super helpful. I’ve made all the mistakes you mentioned. The one that hit me most was the shutter speed. I’ve never even thought about that one. Thank you 🙏
Yeah, it can be an added work in the process, but if the shot has a lot of motion in it sometimes its the only thing I can do to make it look okay. Thanks for watching!
Cooler Flix Ltd : shure ! At least 100 ms shutter speed BUT in most cases you need extra lights...Yungnuo has some nice little led spots 👉🏼see some vids on my music channel👍🏾
I don't own a greenscreen or any editing softwares, why am i here...
I feel you bro
Same
Hellow dedy fake
Same
@@birdsplaybs1234 same and it worked good.
Tip 5 is what makes the effect work in the end. You can have the most clean separation from the green screen but it will look fake if the lighting doesn’t match your background. Great video!
Finally, there is the ONE video, that really helped me. Nearly. No clue where to get the extension - err - things from.
This was really helpful. I solved my issue my reducing my light from the front, as you mentioned, then also increasing a soft light behind. This gave my green screen a flatter and more balanced colour. Thanks for your help!
I just bought a green screen off Amazon for only $17.99 shipped to the house and I love the fact that you're suggesting getting stuff from thrift stores like how I've always done my whole life. That's awesome dude and thanks for the ideas so I don't make all those mistakes.
Wow, great tips Skyler I will for sure use these! Also, I’m excited to see your skits! Can’t wait 😍
Got a couple in the works, and plenty of ideas that hopefully will go into action. Excited to bring them to life!
Skyler Thomas yay! I’m excited too 🎉 🥳
Use blue it is easier to key and it far more forgiving with less light spill.
It really helps with close up shots where the luminosity of green will be hard to key in parts like hair and other hard to key areas however using blue your lighting has to be much more perfect
Awesome video explaining these basics that too often get lost in the storm of creating. Thanks for making it fun and informative.
Good episode.
Extra tip... Use a backlight on the subject to lessen bleed-through of green screen on hair. Works like a charm for most situations. Just place a light to the upper right or left of the green screen and point it at the subject. You’ll have to play around with placement and intensity to reach the desired effect.
Great tip! I've heard even using a subtle magenta gel on the backlight can really help with the bleed as well, though I've never tried it.
Heard that as well, but also never tried it. Hmmm... maybe it’s time I did.
The shutterspeed one was news to me, I never thought of it! Thank you!
I'm about to embark on a project with greenscreen and I'm learning it all from bids online. This video was SO helpful. TYVM
Thanks for the tips!
1. Uneven lighting 0:40
2. Light Falloff (Spill) 2:07
3. Shutter Speed 3:03
4. Green Clothes/Tattoos 3:59
5. Matching the Background 4:28
I am a beginner and just learning about video editing and green screen. It was an Awesome video tutorial. Thanks
Damnnnnnnnnnnn You nailed green screen. I wonder how come such a genius has only 42K subs? He deserves more than Million. I hope to see his sub count Million more while my journey goes on with Skyler Thomas. Allah bless you :)
Yes, he deserves more..
I don't think I'll ever need to know any of this, but it was fun to learn it. There is a lot more to doing that well, even in a home setting, than I would have guessed!
I am amazed, and I attended Full Sail Film School in Orlando Florida! Keep up the good work man
Very Useful Video.....Thanks
That was awesome 👌.
You are doing a heck of a Job .
I tried many times to do but couldn't achieve this so professionally. Thank you for helping me out.
0:39 1. UNEVEN LIGHTING (wrinkles, not even lighting, distance for not casting shadow)
2:05 2. LIGHT FALLOFF
3:03 3. SHUTTER SPEED
3:58 4. GREEN CLOTHES/TATTOOS
4:27 5. MATCHING the BACKGROUND
Fantastic tutorial - great job!
1:50 How is the shadow still there? How is the green behind the shadow removed without the shadow being removed with it? What app are you using here?
Also, general question, how do you make the lighting on the green screen even while keeping the natural lighting?
you can adjust it by applying ultrakey and messing with the color matte
Hi I don't know much about computer but I want to learn how to do green screen
Best video on green screen usage and mistakes for beginners ❤️
I don’t have a green screen at all but thx for the tips
Under 5 minutes basic tutorials on filmora 9 👇👇👇👇👇👇
ua-cam.com/video/b6KbmmigwhM/v-deo.html
This is a Killer instructional video. It's nothing short of awesome. Way to go!
Looks very professional!
And very enjoyable to watch, thanks for the tips!
Thanks. I love it. The next video hope you teach us how to use light in the video.
That guy who edited "I don't care" music video should watch this video
By that Jeremy guy?
@@tovorkimyona966 that Ed Sheeran one
This is a really good video. This is the type of material that should be taught in film school.
I have a question. In some shots your green screen didn't cover the whole screen. I'm wondering how were you cover the entire background without having the green screen covering up the whole screen?
The actor stays in the area with the green screen behind them, that means the rest of the area is useless and they crop away everything outside of the green screen
Dude you are the MAN. Way more helpful and concise than other videos on the same subject.
Also, when the green reflection is falling on your specs.
You May be, seeing tree or greenary or reflection of green screen falling on window glass in front of you
Thank you for your contribution and hard work. Thank you very much.
I once was tasked with keying someone wearing a *transparent* dress..... A *TRANSPARENT* dress. Let that sink in.
I can't imagine how to do that successfully.
I bodged it for sure. It was primarily a black dress and so I did my best to create an alpha mask and put a black solid behind it. It worked, but I'm never doing that again lol.
I've been in that situation where you can't reshoot, so you just spend countless hours trying to make something acceptable in post. Definitely not a fun situation to be in.
The client COULD reshoot, but they didn't want to... Yeah, life sucks sometimes.
Without doubt the best video on green screen advice by far. I've just subscribed. Many thanks Skyler.
I wish I had watched this video last year when I was working on a green screen project for school. The chroma key was all off... In my defense, I had no experience whatsoever with editing or using chroma key and the program I was using didn't help...
Very nice Skyer - clear and not patronising. Would like to see your lighting setup though.
Great video dude ! :) Very informative and useful ! Keep up the good work ! :D
You should leave a 20s outro screen at the end, and put an end screen so you can recommend your other videos to viewers rather than them being given a page of random videos usually from other UA-camrs ! :) \o>
That's a good idea. I'll have to start doing that.
@@SkylerThomas No problem ! :) Good Luck ! You might also want to consider doing merch too for your fans :) It'll generate some income to help with providing even more content for your viewers ! :P I'm dropping Merch start of next year on my channel, already got a high demand for it and I'm only on almost 2,700 Subs ! :) \o>
Really good info, especially lighting the subject to match your final background. I'm using DaVinci and it's a learning process. Have only made one solid green screen clip out of about 17 attempts. BIG LEARNING PROCESS.
What if I can't financially afford to avoid some of these greenscreen mistakes? Do I just have to live with them until I can?
I think the best thing to do is just try to be creative in how you set up the green screen and get the shots to make the shots look as good as possible. Having the space and the equipment to make everything look perfect can be pretty tough, so I'd say just do your best for now and over time you'll see the quality on everything get better.
I used lamps I had at home for my first attempt if that's any help. Tricky to get them evenly lined up but not impossible.
Nice job, direct, easy to follow, not the typical UA-cam self- obsessed tool.
Thank you. Great video, very helpful.
Minor point, I would do away with the music. I find it intrusive and because you have really good content to share, clear diction and a lively intonation, the music is not only superfluous, but for me, distracting.
Thanks. Certainly made some mistakes before. Your video is most refreshing.
i know for a fact the majority of people who are watching this don’t own a green screen
Nope, but I own a green blanket!
gotta ginormous green screen canvas. a portable one and two portable blue screens. don't know what that does to your majority. or your facts.
@@RetroPlus 🤣
Thank you!!! I just started YT, downloaded Premiere Pro, and am so overwhelmed. I definitely need to work on editing next. Thanks again!
0:16 how did you do that editing?
And masking.
I've made each of these mistakes. The uneven lighting was particularly fun to try to fix. Sometimes, you just have to shoot again.
Good info, but the noise, "music" in the background was way too distracting. I should make a video about the top 5 mistakes people make with their AUDIO.
useful information, right to the point, perfect pace, great video!
Just use blue screen instead when you hate having a green stroke
✅
@@ZachCotton oh hi there zach xD
i use blue in deposition videos. then the doctor shows up wearing blue scrubs.
OK I have a couple of green screens. The fabric one that you were showing I found so difficult and a pain to keep steaming and stretching that I opted for an 8 foot green roll of paper green screen. So much easier to work with and when the screen gets old or cruddy I just pull out some more fresh green from the roll. Love the video, great job, keep it short and to the point. Feel free to explain some more of that blend mode you used in Adobe Premiere to make the snow in the scene, that was awesome!
These things really helped! You can see on my last video that the green screen wasn't perfect... xD
Glad to be able to help a bit!
just subscribed. I've watched only two videos so far, but you are so concise and clear. I think it's amazing how much information you convey with so few words.
Step 1: use keylight.
Step 2: bow to keylight.
Step 3: keylight is God now.
Step 4: all hail keylight.
Brilliant video. Thank you.
1.)
Using a green screen instead of a blue screen.
WyldFyreFury why?
Noob. Try getting a pink screen next time.
@Jenq Minecraft Lol I get it
I definitely have some goals for keying and color correcting now. Thanks for the info!
I'm the first dislike.. But i like it
I'm glad the 1 dislike as of right now doesn't actually dislike the video :)
Hohoho... Not easy as that ferguso
. Me the first
Wkwk.. Lu ngapain nyasar kemari bro
I am brand spanking new to Green Screening ... this was very helpful thank you, i shared it on our group as well.
0:16 - I would be so mad if my computer stole my LaCroix.....
the snow trick blew my MIND!! thanks for the tips!
Unnecessary and distracting background music.
Yup should have mixed it better.
Thank you so much... I just switched to green screen and it was a nightmare, your tips really helpped. I am a new subscriber and hit the bell so I don't miss any of your videos, you're great!
Many people make these mistakes. Well explained, useful.
A crazy adventure... to what Canada!? 😆
Appreciate the video mate! Lots of great tips here!!
This is an excellent almost tutorial! By explaining what not to do, you also show what to do.
It would be kind of cool to insert myself into my gaming videos, now I understand what it would take to accomplish that.
Thanks so much. I just bought a green screen for sketches without doing any research before hand. This was pretty easy to understand.
Salute from Singapore! Your video really helps. Thanks bro!
Awesome video, thank you I’ve been using green screen a few months and love it
It's a good set of 5 tips and tricks you made here. Thanks!!
I'm about to shoot my first green screen video. This was very helpful. Thanks!
You are a champ mate.Thanks for such a lovely tutorial
I was looking for a normal crack for a long time and stumbled upon you, thank you very much
Awesome info. Thanks Skyler
The one with the setting sund actually looked pretty good to me because it was what you'd expect shooting a subject with backlighting.
Thanks for sharing your wonderful experience!👍👌👏
Siiip MarkuSip. Top MarkoTop. Josss GonDos BleDosss... Skyler Thomas Oke... Salam VideoGraphy Tretaaan... MarHeBol ...
BarokaAlloohu fiiKum...
WiRo Studio - ABBA Studio.
Skyler, youre the best video trick teacher. Thanks a lot! :)
Love the tutorials!!!!
Thank you man.you really helped me so much.
I‘m just starting out and need all the input i can get.
And again.thank you!
When you're talking about adjusting shutter speed, what if you're filming on an iPhone? Thanks for this video! Clear and concise.
Good tips, Some people don't have room to be able to light the green screen and then the subject, such as me, so shadows are inevitable, but like you said keep as far away as you can from it and that will help. Also I use to use cloth green screen but frankly it was a pain, so I went to popup green screen (the largest one). You can get them with green on one side and blue on the other, which comes in handy as some things you film don't look like it has green in them but when you key out you have problems. Sometimes you can correct it by using Screen Balance in AE keylight by turning it up or down. I went green screen because filming outside has a multitude of problems, weather just being one.
Yeah the pop up green screen must be nice. I should look into one. And there are a number of ways to play with the key if you're working with After Effects which is nice. It has definitely saved me in situations, but still best to to try and have the best conditions possible when shooting, if there is room. Thanks for checking out the video!
Thanks for this. It was indeed helpful. Love from 🇳🇬
WOW, I just need to create a tiny cozy place, and this layer thing blows my mind ! Well done !
So helpful for me. Thanks a kot
Well done! Thank you for taking the time. Some people just know how to teach.
Alll that mistakes are the problems i have been facing so far...thank you for bringing that up....
First rate > very easy to follow. I like seeing the mechanics of setting up th screen. My most common difficulty is even light on the screen . Previously I would carefully paint up large flat boards but I like the idea of a dyed green sheet stretched across. the snow in front of t character was excellent.
Thank you! Super informative in a short space of time. Nice work.
This helped me with my class video project! I didn’t know about the lighting until I failed at getting that full look. Thanks for the info!