That Was A Hoot.
How imperfect can a green screen be and still produce decent results? This video was shot to answer that burning question.
This is just another project to distract me from the overwhelming dullness of this overly self-conscious existential life. I've got ideas. So many ideas. Eventually they'll take form. In the meantime i'll just be carrying on. I have a video i've been putting off shooting. I should probably go film that.
Test Results: Needs More Work.
A hastily hung green screen, unattended wrinkles, one-point lighting, and sides that needed cropped. All that considered, i think it went quite well. Good thing you can sink hours of tedious work in post-production to fix issues that would take minutes to fix in the initial shoot. But hey, i'm not complaining, I love moving keyframes.
Background Photo Credits, in order of appearance:
Subway Station Photo by Chris Barbalis on Unsplashed.com
Mountains Photo by Dirk Spijkers on Unsplashed.com
Windmill/Guardrail Photo by Gerardo Marrufo on Unsplashed.com
Sunset/Wheat Photo by Tim Graf on Unsplashed.com
Kitchen Photo by Oleksandr Kurchev on Unsplashed.com
Kitchen with Window by Jens Johnsson on Unsplashed.com
Jeep Photo by SHUJA ZED on Unsplashed.com
Jungle Photo by veeterzy on Unsplashed.com
Campfire Photo by Cullan Smith on Unsplashed.com
Painted Wall Photo by Patrick Tomasso on Unsplashed.com
Locker Room Photo by Liz Weddon on Unsplashed.com
Rave Photo by Joel Amissa on Unsplashed.com
Night/Alley Photo by Benjamin Hung on Unsplashed.com
Ship Wheel Photo by Maximilian Weisbecker on Unsplashed.com
Wave Photo by Jeremy Bishop on Unsplashed.com
Crow's Nest Photo by Armando Castillejos on Unsplashed.com
Desert Mountains Photo by Vincent Etter on Unsplashed.com
Desert Sunset Photo by Fabian Struwe on Unsplashed.com
Desert Trees Photo by Patrick Hendry on Unsplashed.com
Tree Branch Photo by Facundo Loza on Unsplashed.com