• Welcome To Our Article Submission Directory

    Start reading about your favorite topic and learn some cool new tricks and tips.

    Want to submit your article to this article directory and to over 10000 other sites with 3 backlinks to your pages?

  •  

Subscribe to this blog

Subscribe to full feed RSS
What the? RSS?!

Subscribe Via Email

We respect your privacy.

Green Screen Studios and Videos

By Article Guy On December 4, 2009 Under Movies

Whether you are an amateur or a professional, when it comes to making use of green screen studio, you are all practically on the same boat. Being in the same environment makes you subject to following the same set of guidelines and regardless whether you are financed by a multi-billion project, or you just simple want to shoot a happy birthday video for your better half, you have got to follow the same set of rules in using green screen studios.

First off how do green screen studios work? The entire idea of green screens and blue screens were highly preferred way back in the seventy’s when you’ll see the tacky but classic weatherman delivering the report and pointing at a gigantic animated map beside him which would at times switch to photos and pictures and till later on returning to the map.

What they do is they make the weatherman stand in front of a green background and then deliver his report there. After that, the editors get the video to take out the green background or the blue background and then substitute it with a picture of the map and the other photographs that they are going to be putting in there.

In that time, a lot of costs are saved because of the green screen. Imagine not being forced to prepare numerous props and travelling to locations to deliver a scene. In modern times, the green screen has shown its purpose not only in weather reporting but in creating upscale pictures with special effects. A perfect example will be that of Star Wars. From there it has escalated to a different kind of art form. The modernity of software available today has made nice things possible through the use of green screen terraces.

A lot of software these days supports recording and revising videos in chroma background. Due to this, practically any one with a big basement or a garage and one who knows how to properly light up a background can make special effects that would have made 70′s Sci Fi directors drool. If you can make green screen studio in your house, then the subsequent responsibility will be left to learning to edit it. This is where things get a tiny bit more complicated. It will also be a test of your concerns. Are you willing to spend a great deal of time, effort and not to mention the learning curve of creating your own videos?