|
Current
projects: |
|
|
Past
projects: |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
PROJECTS:
Truematte
(1 of 2)
Chroma-key
is a well-established technique in TV production. It allows actors
and props to be extracted from a camera image and superimposed onto
another image to form a composite image showing the actors against
a 'virtual' background. The actors stand in front of a background of
a uniform colour. The background colour must not be present anywhere
in the foreground; for that reason, blue is often chosen. A keying
unit detects those parts of the camera image that contain this 'key'
colour, and replaces them with the background image.
In order to generate
a good key signal with low noise, it is necessary to have the coloured
background illuminated brightly and evenly. This gives rise to several
problems, particularly when used in large studios:
It is often time-consuming
and difficult to provide bright and even illumination over a large
area.
|
|
 |
Fig.
1
The new retro-reflective background in use in a virtual studio. |
 |
Fig.
2
A ring of bright blue LEDs fitted around the camera lens. |
|
|
| navigation: |
| Page
1 ¦ 2 |
| patents: |
UK patent GB2321565
|
| links: |
The
retroreflective material and LED rings are now available
commercially from reflecmedia.com
|
|
 |
|
| |
 |
It
is sometimes difficult to light the actors to give the desired
artistic effect, since the lighting is primarily determined by
the technical requirements of the key generation. Scenes with low
lighting levels pose particular problems. |
 |
Areas where
dark shadows cannot be avoided, such as under tables, do not produce
clean key signals. |
 |
Coloured
light scattered from the brightly-lit background and floor lands
on actors and props, changing their hue and giving an unnatural
appearance. This is known as 'spill'. |
BBC R&D has developed
a keying method that overcomes all of these problems. The system
 |
places
no constraints on studio lighting (and will even work in complete
darkness!); |
 |
eliminates ‘spill’; |
 |
allows clean
keying even in difficult areas such as dark shadows; |
 |
works with conventional
chroma-keyers and allows shadows to be extracted. |
Fig. 1 shows the
method in use in a virtual studio production. It uses a background
made of a special retro-reflective material, illuminated by a light
of the chosen key colour mounted on the camera. Retro-reflective materials
reflect nearly all incident light back in the direction from which
it comes. They are usually made out of tiny glass beads with a reflective
coating on half their surface. Such materials are commonly used in
road signs, to make them appear bright to a driver viewing them by
his headlights. In this application, the material reflects the coloured
light straight back into the camera, ensuring that the background appears
brightly lit regardless of the setting of the studio lights. The material
appears to have a dark grey colour under normal illumination, so coloured
spill onto actors is eliminated.
Ideally, the source
of coloured light should be placed coincident with the camera lens.
This may be done using a semi-silvered mirror in front of the camera,
which reflects a blue light to make it appear to come from the centre
of the lens (as in a front-axial projection system). A more compact
alternative which gives results almost as good is to use a ring of
bright LEDs around the camera lens (Fig. 2). To change the key colour,
it is only necessary to change the lights on the cameras; there is
no need to change the whole cyclorama.
|
|
|
|