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Blend Modes with Filters in Avid Xpress Pro on Tiger

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STEP 1: Apply filters to clips and sequences

The easiest way to begin is to drop any of the more than 80 Noise Industries plug-in filters (bundled with Noise’s standalone Factory Floor app in Xpress Pro as "Factory Tools") onto a video or still image clip, or — a very cool Avid technique — onto any blank track above the sequence you’d like to affect. Filter a whole sequence in one stroke! Even better, you can build your own custom filters, or customize existing ones, with this same OS-level technology. I’ll show you how to add an advanced compositing tool to your Avid real-time animated blend modes.

STEP 2: Enter Factory Floor

Rather than use the ready-made plug-in filters inside Avid Xpress Pro, exit Xpress Pro and launch Factory Floor from your Application folder. Select the Core Effects icon on the left side of the new window, and press the Open Core Effects button.

STEP 3: Start building a new plug-in

In the upper left of the Factory Tools window, click on New Plug-in. In the resulting dialog box, type a name for the effect (Composite), and either select a category from the pop-up list, or create a new one called Composite. This particular filter will be built on a Core Image Unit (the default choice), and the unit itself is Gaussian Blur. Select it from the pop-up list.

STEP 4: Polish your new filters

On the Renderer tab, the only change you’ll make is in the Compositing section, to change the Blend mode from Normal to Overlay. ("Normal" essentially does nothing; it’s never my favorite default.)

Then, on the Parameters tab, in the Numeric category, set the Initial Value to zero. One reason I chose the Gaussian Blur unit as a starting point is that I like the idea of being able to add a blur, just in case any of my composites look too harsh. But most of the time, I won’t want any blur by default.

That’s all there is to it. Save and Quit. Read on for how to use it.

STEP 5: Start using your new filter

Launch Avid Xpress Pro and you’ll find your filter in the Composite category that you just created.

Drag the filter onto the top of two stacked layers, and it creates a blend with the layer below. To customize beyond the defaults, open the Effect Editor by either choosing it from the Tools menu, or press the shortcut button in the upper left of your Timeline window.

Feel free to experiment with different blend modes to see which looks best to you. The results will vary entirely based on the footage you’re using, so the "best" choice will change every time.

Here, I’m using the Soft Light blend mode, I transformed a much stronger, summery-looking lotus into a subtle background element for autumn leaves. Notice how the leaves blend differently with the dark and light areas of the flower, and how the background of the lotus scene adds much more texture to the right half of the frame, compared to the rather flat background of the leaves. It’s a more dynamic combination that’s also more truly blended than straight transparency would allow.

STEP 6: Apply your new filter to a title

One of the most effective ways to use blend modes is with titles. Add a title to your sequence, and drag the Composite filter to it. It won’t look right until you press the "Apply to Title or Matte" button in the Effect Editor. Here’s a white title with a black border and our old friend the Overlay blend mode. It’s quite striking how the actual color of the text, as well as what’s showing through it, changes with the background. It’s even more striking in motion, of course (stay tuned for a look at this online at www.studiomonthly.com), but you get the idea.

STEP 7: Save your customized filter to a bin for reuse

To finish up, save your customized variation to apply to other titles later. Click on the Effect icon, the "plug" image in the upper right of the Effect Editor, and drag it to any open bin where you can rename it if you want. It’s not just filter parameters that you can save, either. You can add keyframes before you drag the filter to your bin, and now, whenever you apply your customized Composite filter to a title, those keyframes will also be applied.

STEP 8: Experiment!

This is just scratching the surface. Animate the opacity of a blend, scale the output to create two layers in one, add color— all in real time. Set "Composite Over" in the Effect Editor to "Effect Layer" to composite a layer on itself. Create variations of this filter in Factory Floor to populate your Composite Effects category with the real-time compositing that you need. You’ll be amazed what you find in this filter as you dig a little deeper.

YOUR GUIDE

Tim Wilson
Sr. Product Marketing Manager
Avid Technology

Before joining Avid, Tim developed effects and titling software and ran his own video production company for 10 years.

Tim Says Keep In Mind...

Core Image Units are filter, effects and transition packages bundled inside the Tiger OS itself. Their real-time performance is provided by the graphics card that’s part of your desktop or laptop Mac. Quartz Compositions are combinations of Core Image units. Read all about it at www.apple.com/macosx/features/coreimage/. And for more, including demo movies, on Avid and the bundled Noise Industries apps, check out www.avid.com/community/mac/. Blend modes (aka apply modes or composite modes) give you more flexible ways of mixing layers. Rather than simply making every pixel equally transparent as you blend, you can choose, for example, to have dark pixels blend more than light ones. Within a filter, blend modes might apply an effect based on the difference between the brightness of pixels on two layers. Blend modes produce dramatic looks, but they’re processing-intensive. By harnessing the power of the Tiger OS and your computer’s graphics card (GPU), Avid provides real-time compositing power.

Don’t just settle for the first thing you see when you choose a blend mode. The Image Opacity slider at the bottom of the Effect Editor lets you mix the results of your blend with the original layer for a much wider range of looks.

While Avid Xpress Pro is a cross-platform app, this tutorial only applies to the Mac on Tiger.

Avid Technology
www.avid.com
One Park West
Tewksbury, MA 01876
ph. 800.949.AVID (2843)
e-mail: tim_wilson@avid.com




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