Alex Greene Posted November 13, 2011 Share Posted November 13, 2011 (edited) Here's my improved attempt at creating Muzzle Flashes on Sony Vegas Pro 10, any further feedback would be appreciated! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6X3wtdnk19Q Thanks guys. Edited November 13, 2011 by Alex Greene Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dan kessler Posted November 13, 2011 Share Posted November 13, 2011 Maybe take the smoke density down a bit, a little more noise in the transparency to break up the uniformity; it's a little too dark, keep it on the light side. Less is more. (just like real vfx dailies!) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Gregg Posted November 14, 2011 Share Posted November 14, 2011 (edited) Your smoke is too gray (background bleed through) and the velocity feels wrong. If you are doing the smoke in After Effects (or similar) take the smoke you have on black and move the black and white to the alpha channel. You can then put a full field of turbulent whitish gray in the color channels and get rid of the dark ring on the edges completely. First thing I would do is find all of the real and movie muzzle flashes I could and compile them into a reference reel to study. Then start building an image based on the real thing, and work toward the imaginary and dramatized version. Finding some real muzzle flashes at night from a similar kind of firearm would be a good thing to find as an element. http://www.davidgreggassociates.com Edited November 14, 2011 by David Gregg Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Phil Rhodes Posted November 14, 2011 Premium Member Share Posted November 14, 2011 What Mr. Gregg said. Too many people try to screen the smoke in; treat it instead as an alpha channel, and put some other, more solid smoke in as the colour. Also the flashes are far too small. Lastly, you're in a situation where the flashes would be barely visible, even with the magnesium-enhanced movie blanks. Do a night exterior and you'll get the big white flashes. Anywhere well lit or in daylight and it's a lambent effect at best. P Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member John Sprung Posted November 14, 2011 Premium Member Share Posted November 14, 2011 In reality, you'd barely see the smoke at all in daylight -- or pretty much any lighting condition. Maybe it would be something to bring in as a last subtle touch after you get the flame right. But at this point, it's way too heavy. -- J.S. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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