Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You can try to minimize them with all sorts of noise removal plug-ins like RevisionFX' DE:Noise plus you may be able to further disguise this by blurring it with SmoothKit, but the real answer is that ideally you should simply re-render your 3D stuff with increased settings for antialiasing and sampling.
Mylenium
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You can try to minimize them with all sorts of noise removal plug-ins like RevisionFX' DE:Noise plus you may be able to further disguise this by blurring it with SmoothKit, but the real answer is that ideally you should simply re-render your 3D stuff with increased settings for antialiasing and sampling.
Mylenium
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I agree with you about re-rendering will be the best solution, I'm recently using chaos vantage, which takes ages to render the whole video, I'm trying to find a way if can decrease these by post-production in AE, I will try to see the plug-in you've mentioned and let you know if it works.
Thank you 👍😊
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Looks indeed much better. If you still have a bit of time you could try to replace the clock face with a tracked version. due to the high contrast and bright colors that's one of the areas where some flickering is still quite noticeable.
Mylenium
Find more inspiration, events, and resources on the new Adobe Community
Explore Now