Chapter13.Air, Water, Smoke, and Clouds


Chapter 13. Air, Water, Smoke, and Clouds

Conversation about the weather is the last refuge of the unimaginative.

Oscar Wilde

Yes, yes, let's talk about the weather.

W. S. Gilbert, The Pirates of Penzance, or, The Slave of Duty

Even if you're never called upon to re-create the extreme weather events depicted in The Day After Tomorrow, climate conditions along with natural elements of water and wind are a constant in dramatic storylines. You may need to re-create these effects from scratch, or you may be called upon to subtly tweak what's already in the shot.

This chapter will give you some pointers on creating such natural elements as particulate matter in the air, replacement skies, mist, fog, smoke, the effects of wind, and water in its three states.

Why would you want to do this? Simply because the crew couldn't get the conditions the story required on the day of the shoot? Well, in extreme cases, yes. But actually, any large exterior shot will exhibit some sort of meteorological influence, and everything in the shot is interrelated. In this chapter, you'll investigate the phenomena that you can influence or even replace wholesale, including

  • Particulate matter in the air: The look of particles in the air can give you important clues to your scene. Is it ever complicated to deal with particulate matter? Where does it not apply?

  • Sky replacement: This is one of those straightforward requests that comes up for effects compositors all the time. What is involved?

  • Clouds of fog, smoke, or mist: You can sense motion, color, and even depth in this element. How can these be created in After Effects?

  • Billowing smoke: What about thick plumes of smoke? Those need to be created with some sort of complex 3D dynamics system, right? Wrong.

  • Wind: How do you re-create something you can't see? Figuring out cheap and easy ways to show its presence via secondary animation can really sell your shot.

  • Water and precipitation: The presence of water can influence your shot either onscreen or off. How do you handle rain and snow?

It's rare indeed that weather conditions cooperate on location. Transforming the appearance of a scene using natural elements is one of the most satisfying things you can do as a compositor. The before and after comparison alone can be stunning, and the result can be worthy of a blockbuster film that is specifically about heavy weather.



Adobe After Effects 6. 5 Studio Techniques
Adobe After Effects 6.5 Studio Techniques
ISBN: 0321316207
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 156

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