Fusion da vinci6/23/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() I would like to remove the little spots inside the bokeh lights (not the bokeh lights) but the principle you applied in your example is very interesting. I would love if someone here at Lowepost, as there are many people with a deep understanding of Fusion if something like that is possible to remove with paint and track (and how) -a tutorial posted here would be really helpful for people like me that are having problems in Fusion with tracking and paint-, or I am dreaming and such a situation the only option as you suggest is to paint out frame by frame.Ĭlip to remove dust spots on the out of focus lights The out of focus lights have the spots (I guess dust spots from the lens rear element) This are the ones that need to go. I have this clip where the magic needs to happen. Once I have painted out all the spots I group them (as there are many strokes) with a paint group and go to controls and right click on the "Center x" and I choose "modify with" and I get 3 tracking options (tracker, tracker steady and tracker unsteady) -don't know which one to choose-In the tracker source I put the Media In but it does not track correctly (I am doing something wrong here for sure). There are so many options (tracker, planer tracker, etc) and the modify with in the "stroke controls" (tracker position, tracker steady position, tracker unsteady position.) that I get confused. The thing is I get lost in the tracking step. As all the spots move in the same direction in theory a track would maintain always the same cloning area and it would clone out as the camera moves. ![]() Just clone all the spots out in one frame with the paint tool in Fusion and the track it. I thought something like this would be easy. Painting out dozens of spots in hundreds of frames could take me a few days.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |