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Hi,
I am trying to Rotoscope first time on a 1 minute 30 seconds video.
Able to select the subject. But unable to move frame by frame to adjust the mask. It shows rotoscoping 1 of 3000+ items. Not sure why those many frames its propagating.
Is there any minmum system requirement to run Rotoscoping smoothly.
I have 1TB hard disk with 412GB free space.
I really need to use this Roto scoping. What makes you Rotoscoping go atleast little smoother?
Thanks and Regards,
Eswari
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Thanks for writing in. What's the version of After Effects you're using? Also, what are your system specifications (CPU, GPU, RAM, OS version)? Roto Brush should work fine if your computer meets the minimum system specifications: https://adobe.ly/3B2pjND
Can you try using Roto Brush on a different clip? Let us know how it goes.
Thanks,
Nishu
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I am 16GB RAM with 1TB harddisk
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650
Lenevo Legion Y540 model
Windows 11 Home Edition
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The first suggestion I would make is to split the footage layer every 5 to 10 seconds, pre-compose each of the shorter layers, move all attributes to the new comps, and trim the layer length. This will give you a dozen or more short layers to run Rotobrush on and create a master comp with an alpha matte you can render and use as a Track Matte for the original footage. When each layer has been successfully completed, pre-compose again, move all attributes, and then pre-render these comps. You can also create a mask on the original footage so that you are only having Rotobrush look at the part of the image that needs work. If you just need to put a graphic behind someone's back, there is not need to run rotobrush on the entire body. Anything you can do to reduce the number of pixels that rotobrush will have to examine will speed up the process and help you finish the project.
The reasons for that workflow are as follows:
I am lucky enough to be able to work on what is now the fastest and most capable system you can buy, and I would never consider running Rotobrush on a minute and 30-second clip. A 1:30 shot at 30 frames per second is about 2700 frames. On the latest version of AE, on my machine, a 10-second 4K clip takes about 10 minutes to trim, color correct to improve edge contrast (not for final work, but specifically for rotobrush), Pre-compose again, move all attributes, run, Rotobrush, Freeze, then Pre-Render and replace the Roto as a track matte in the main comp. I'm guessing that on your machine, the same shot would take about 15 or 20 minutes. I would not even try to work on a minute and 30 shot as a single layer. It's always best to break up your comps into the minimum length and even size required to complete the effects.
Here's a short screen capture showing the basic comp layout required to change the color of a crew member's pants so it would match the rest of the crew I recently did for a project of mine. You can see the masked and Rotobrushed pre-comp that was used.
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That sounds wonderful which I am not aware of the Pre-comps earlier. I will learn a bit about that and apply and get back here with the results.
Thanks
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Hi Rick,
I am trying to remove a background where the subject has curly hair which is leaving white edge behind. So, rotoscoping seems best option for me to remove the background and make the subject hair looks refined. The subject is in sitting position and only the head moved while speaking.
I am trying with a 10 second clip. After a week am able to see the frames movement. Thanks to you for making me realize how rotoscope lags. After trying to learn through youtubes, where people show it like do it in seconds, I felt something wrong with my system and many days passed trying to fix the issue where there is no issue.
I tried your first suggestion. Seems working. I am not very well used with precomp and pre-rendering and master comp at this time. I will try to work on my way to put your suggestions in place. For now, I have separated clips and working on each of them separately.
The first suggestion I would make is to split the footage layer every 5 to 10 seconds, pre-compose each of the shorter layers, move all attributes to the new comps, and trim the layer length. This will give you a dozen or more short layers to run Rotobrush on and create a master comp with an alpha matte you can render and use as a Track Matte for the original footage. When each layer has been successfully completed, pre-compose again, move all attributes, and then pre-render these comps.