Total: 4 results found. Advanced Search
... use the same approach in Nuke, the Grade node offers a convenient way to group some of those simple operations into a single node. Speaking in Shake's terms, think of it as a group that contains an expand node (blackpoint/whitepoint), a compress node (lift/gain), a mult (multiply), an add (offset), and a gamma (gamma, huh!) in one node. Breakdown ...
Section: Tutorials, Interviews and Info Pages | Category: Written Tutorials | Date: Monday, 23 August 2010 | Hits: 19168
Here you are a brief explanation of all controls in Nuke's random expression. This is the full function 'by default': (random(1,frame*1)*1)+0 or just simplified: random(1,frame) This creates a curve containing random values between 0 and 1. The breakdown controls: (random(seed,frame*frequency)*amplitude)+valueOffset seed value randomly changes the ...
Section: Tutorials, Interviews and Info Pages | Category: Written Tutorials | Date: Wednesday, 04 April 2012 | Hits: 96386
... wipes across the glass with his arm to clear the non-existent dust away. John Carter Nuke Particles Breakdown from Nukepedia on Vimeo. Now 3D FX work could've obviously done the job, however there were no additional plates shot for it, and Nuke 6.3 had recently been released with the particle toolset included, so we decided ...
Section: Tutorials, Interviews and Info Pages | Category: Interviews | Date: Wednesday, 27 February 2013 | Hits: 21373
... and finally F8 will resume running as normal until the debugger finds another breakpoint. When the debugger is paused, you can run commmands in the Console (cool!) and view/change variables in the Variables window. For a more detailed breakdown, check out this page. http://pydev.org/manual_adv_debugger.html Remote debugging another ...
Section: Tutorials, Interviews and Info Pages | Category: Written Tutorials | Date: Sunday, 13 October 2013 | Hits: 11222

We have 4456 guests and 54 members online