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Adding and Removing Film Grain
Adding and Removing Film Grain
Removing Grain from a Clip
About Film Grain
Grain is a basic characteristic of film
that is derived from the individual silver halide crystals randomly
distributed across an image. The random distribution of these crystals
creates the visual impression of graininess, which adds a distinctive
look to film. In addition, different film stocks have different grain
signatures.
You can use grain management tools to create
convincing composites between video, or CG-generated elements, and
film material. The DeGrain and ReGrain tools are useful in a number
of scenarios. For example:
- If
you are pulling keys from key-in film clips, film grain can make
generating a clean matte more difficult. Using the DeGrain tool,
you can remove the grain from the key-in clip, generate the matte
from that clip, and apply the matte to the original grainy key-in
clip. The result is a clean, precise matte applied to a properly
grainy film clip.
- If
you are mixing film clips originating from different film stocks,
you can match the grain in the clips to make the grain in your results
look consistent.
- If
you are working with footage originally shot on film and transferred
to video, you can remove the grain and match the film material with
video material.
- If
you are working with video material or CG-generated elements, you may
want to add grain to the clips to result in a film look.
- You
can use DeGrain tools to remove grain from film clips before performing
any image processes. After you are finished, you can use ReGrain
tools to restore the film grain to the final result.
Grain management workflow, much like working
with LUTs, depends heavily on the specific qualities of the media
you are working with. Use the procedures described in the following
sections to put together the processing steps that you need to get
the results that you want.