thank you for showing how to change the 3d tracked camera into a redshift camera! ive been tearing my hair out. had the exact same problem as you where all my keyframes would jump to my new redshift camera
Love this tutorial! I just think the other one you do (with the character on the roof), makes it more accurate to design the environment, due to adding the constraint that makes the distance in real scale.
Hey man, yes the motion tracker in c4d is more accurate for setting up the correct project scale and all that good stuff.. For this apple video I only needed to scale my apple to match the other apples so I said I'd go with the AE tracker to save some time.
Hey there! Thanks very much for your vids, they're super useful. Was just wondering why you've used the AE tracker here as opposed to doing this all in C4D? I see that you've used the inbuilt C4D tracker for previous vids. I have a project which will be using these techniques soon (flying 3d object through live action footage // object interacting with the space) and I'm just wondering what the benefits are of using the AE tracker vs. keeping everything in c4d.
Hi Jack, glad to hear you're getting some use out of the tutorials. For me, deciding what software to use for tracking depends on the footage and if I need to be specific with whats being tracked. With c4d you can isolate certain parts of the footage to be tracked or ignored from the track. You can also create your own track points and be super selective in that regard. Another cool thing about tracking in c4d is that you can give cinema an idea of the scale of what's being tracked.... The benefit of using AE is that it's easier and therefore faster. If I don't need to isolate areas of the footage, set the scale, pick specific pixels to be tracked then I'll just use AE. It's quick and easy and get's the job done.
@@jbmocean399nice, thanks for the clarification. I’ll probably give my shots a go in both AE and C4D trackers to compare, since they’re relatively quick processes. Again, thanks a bunch for the tuts. Pacing is spot on.
You're a genius, that was really cool.
I do 3d myself, and I'm interested in such videos
Thanks man, I'm no genius though, cinema 4d makes this stuff easy, glad you liked the video
thank you for showing how to change the 3d tracked camera into a redshift camera! ive been tearing my hair out. had the exact same problem as you where all my keyframes would jump to my new redshift camera
True, it's so frustrating that they delete this feature from 2024 version,and now we need to create some fix for it.
Love this tutorial! I just think the other one you do (with the character on the roof), makes it more accurate to design the environment, due to adding the constraint that makes the distance in real scale.
Hey man, yes the motion tracker in c4d is more accurate for setting up the correct project scale and all that good stuff.. For this apple video I only needed to scale my apple to match the other apples so I said I'd go with the AE tracker to save some time.
Legend, thank you!! They need to update the motion tracker to support redshift natively! Hon the Irish☘🦾
Fact! Hopefully the'll sort it in the next version
Can you make a video on how to cover a building with a cloth simulation?
Great idea
Why don't you use "invert ACES 1.0 SDR-video" in color space of your footage? It give you ability to work with correct colors.
thank you for the tutorial !
Hey, thanks for watching!
Hey there! Thanks very much for your vids, they're super useful. Was just wondering why you've used the AE tracker here as opposed to doing this all in C4D? I see that you've used the inbuilt C4D tracker for previous vids. I have a project which will be using these techniques soon (flying 3d object through live action footage // object interacting with the space) and I'm just wondering what the benefits are of using the AE tracker vs. keeping everything in c4d.
Hi Jack, glad to hear you're getting some use out of the tutorials. For me, deciding what software to use for tracking depends on the footage and if I need to be specific with whats being tracked. With c4d you can isolate certain parts of the footage to be tracked or ignored from the track. You can also create your own track points and be super selective in that regard. Another cool thing about tracking in c4d is that you can give cinema an idea of the scale of what's being tracked.... The benefit of using AE is that it's easier and therefore faster. If I don't need to isolate areas of the footage, set the scale, pick specific pixels to be tracked then I'll just use AE. It's quick and easy and get's the job done.
@@jbmocean399nice, thanks for the clarification. I’ll probably give my shots a go in both AE and C4D trackers to compare, since they’re relatively quick processes.
Again, thanks a bunch for the tuts. Pacing is spot on.
Lovely! Keep them coming!
Valeu!
Thanks man, I really appreciate it!