Basic compositing in hitfilm
HitFilm is Basic and powerful 2D and 3D
compositor. Most of your extensive compositing in hitfilm work is carried out using composite shots, layer-based
timelines which are designed specifically for that purpose.You can find out more about advanced
compositing here.The editor timeline also includes
simpler compositing capabilities, useful for picture-in-picture, fades,blends and static visual effects.
Using multiple tracks
When we compositing in hitfilm Multiple tracks can be used to combine
multiple video clips on the same frame.Higher tracks will be rendered on top
of lower tracks.To find out more about using tracks
see Audio and video tracks.Once you have more than one track you
can place clips at the same time position. If the clips are all the same size you will only see the
top clip, which is when you use transforming, effects or blending to composite them together.
you can also chick out audio track in Hitfilm
you can also chick out audio track in Hitfilm
Transforming clips
Clips can be transformed when we compositing in hitfilm on the editor
timeline, meaning you can change their position, scale and rotation. This is useful for creating
simple picture-in-picture, such as during a presentation or news style broadcast.To transform a clip, first select it
on the timeline. You can then control it in the Viewer or Controls panel.
In the Viewer you will see a transform
widget:
Dragging on the arrow will move the
clip on the horizontal or vertical, while dragging on the blue square will rotate it. You can also
click anywhere else on the clip to move it freely.At the 4 corners of a clip are handles
which can be dragged to resize it. Holding Shift maintains the aspect ratio while holding Alt rotates
the clip.
The Controls panel provides fine control over the clip's
transform properties:
compositing in hitfilm |
Clicking once on a property lets you
type in a new value. Dragging on a value increases or decreases it.You can also apply
simple transformations using the clip's menu on the timeline. This is an easy way to resize the clip to fit the
frame or be centered.
You can't animate the
transform properties in the editor timeline. For animation see Compositing
Anchor points
Every clip has an anchor point.
This is the clip's origin around which it rotates.The default anchor point for
clips is in the center. For most purposes this is the most useful location for the anchor point but there are
some circumstances where moving the anchor point would be beneficial.For example, if you had a
simple rectangular plane and wanted to rotate it around one corner instead of its center, you would move the
anchor point to that corner then use the normal rotation controls.
Blending clips
By default clips are simply rendered
on on top of the other, such that higher layers completely obscure lower layers. Blend modes
are used to mix multiple clips together in more interesting ways.You can change
the blend mode of a clip by selecting it on the timeline and then viewing its
Clip Properties
in the Controls panel, or by using the clips timeline menu.See Blend modes for
detaileds of each blend mode.
A clip's opacity can be changed over
time. This lets you create simple, manual fades or to turn a clip semi-transparent.Opacity can be
adjusted in the Controls panel or directly on the timeline. Every clip has an
opacity bar
which can be dragged up and down.
By default the opacity bar will change
the opacity of the entire clip. You can add keyframes by holding Ctrl and clicking on the
opacity bar.Keyframing can also be turned on and
off in the controls panel by clicking the keyframe button to the left of the Opacity property.
Keying your green screen clips
HitFilm when its come to compositing then it includes a wide range of
compositing effects, which are found in the Keying folder of the Effects library. Many of these effects
work in the editor timeline as well as in composite shots.For example, the color difference key
is a simple but effective effect for removing green screen backgrounds. To apply it to a clip
simply drag it from the Effects panel onto the clip containing the green screen video. You can then
refine the settings in the Controls panel. To create a simple green screen
composite, place your keyed green screen clip on the track above the background (which can be either a video or an image).
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