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Dr Strange portal effect with Particular ?

Guest
Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

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Hey,

So after seeing the movie, I was really curious about how managable it would be to replicate that visual in After Effects, and despite douzens of tutorials online, not a single one (in my opinion) get close to a decent result, the only one who's actually really close to it is from Moraru.

So I decided to try and experiment on my own with Particular, I manage to have a decent loop of particles, but using Particular for only a few weeks, I still have trouble understanding how to use it to affect my particles how I envisionned it.

Basically, here's a screenshot of the look I'm trying to get : http://www.doctorstrange.asia/assets/img/common/doctor-strange-portal-menu-bg.jpg

The biggest issue I have is to set the motion of the particules the right way, their look is mainly related to motion blur and glow, that's not an issue, but I can't seem to get the motion right.

Any ideas ?

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LEGEND , Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

There aren't that many "crazy" particles actually. Logically analyzing your reference image really only gives the following results:

  • the particles move in Z direction away from the camera after they have left the emitter
  • there is gravity towards the bottom, explaining the curved paths of some particles
  • possibly there's a slight wind from the left, making them fan out a bit more on the right side
  • the rogue particles appear to be just a result of random low emission velocity and very short life spans,
...

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LEGEND ,
Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

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Without seeing your actual settings in Particular and how it looks on your end, nobody can advise.

Mylenium

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Guest
Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

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Of course, my bad.

Here's how it looks, I have them animated in a loop of course, this is just a screenshot of a frame.

http://img11.hostingpics.net/pics/172203particles.jpg

These a also just the raw particles, without any motion blur or glow (yet).

EDIT : And my settings in Particular :  http://img11.hostingpics.net/pics/685749part1.jpg

http://img11.hostingpics.net/pics/514250part2.jpg

I tried to play with the velocity and direction but I can't get it to look more like the first screenshot I linked.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

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Please just drag your screenshots directly to the reply field on this forum. It makes things easier for us. It's also a lot easier if you select the layer in question, press the U key twice to reveal all modified properties and then send us the entire app screenshot without cropping.

I haven't got the time to dig through your screenshots and try and make sense of them this morning but Mylenium is correct, it's just settings that need to be adjusted.

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LEGEND ,
Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

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You need to use the Spherical Field to "suck in" the particles to the center and towards the depth. I would also recommend to simply use the Aux particles to create the trailing effects. You would have to crank up the motion blur considerably with long shutter phase and many samples and that may be a lot slower than faking it.

Mylenium

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Guest
Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

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Hum... I'm actually not familiar with the Aux particles settings, and therefore I would need to experiment with it before to understand it.

But actually, I continued trying to get closer and closer to the result I wanted adjusting the settings and the motion blur, and I went really close to what I have in mind.

Here's what I've got at the present time : Portal.JPG

Still need a few adjustments in my opinion, for instance not all the particles follow the same path on the picture I linked in my first post, some are loose and go kinda crazy on the left, up and down.

I assume I could duplicate my layer and change the settings to something with less particles, but I still need to find a way to affect their motion (physics, velocity, direction or something else ?) to create those crazy particles.

NB : I would have take a screenshot of the whole app but I couldn't display all the settings I already had affected within a single screenshot.

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LEGEND ,
Feb 12, 2017 Feb 12, 2017

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There aren't that many "crazy" particles actually. Logically analyzing your reference image really only gives the following results:

  • the particles move in Z direction away from the camera after they have left the emitter
  • there is gravity towards the bottom, explaining the curved paths of some particles
  • possibly there's a slight wind from the left, making them fan out a bit more on the right side
  • the rogue particles appear to be just a result of random low emission velocity and very short life spans, that prevents them from producing trails
  • the emitter itself seems to have some rotation along its up-axis to further create this twisted/ curved look of the circle

All of this can easily be re-created by tweaking the settings in Particular, though of course it's hard to envision the actual result just from a still and no doubt the effect was done in a more complex environment like a 3D program or Nuke.

Mylenium

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Guest
Feb 13, 2017 Feb 13, 2017

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LATEST

Alright then, thanks to your advices I was able to tweak the settings again and again until I get a pretty decent result in my opinion.

With curves and glow added to the comp, here's what I've got.

PartRe.JPG

I also put a a floor and a bounce to the particles.

Thanks for your help, it has been helpful !

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