Shotgun API in Nuke
Posted in: NUKE from The FoundryI want to work with Shotgun in Nuke.
I imported the Python API Bindings "shotgun_api3"
Nuke throws an ImportError, saying that Module "_md5" was not found. The same Script works fine when I run it outside of Nuke (in a different python environment)
Can anyone help?
cheers,
sean
Oliver Zeller, adNAU, Tino Schaedler: 2011
Posted in: cg, cinematography, Design, directing, vfxKeeping on the space age tip, NYC based former writer turned director and VFX designer, Oliver Zeller directed this teaser short faux commerical for i-cocoon.com, featuring a future concept by Tino Schaedler. Both Oliver and Tino make up the design collective adNAU. The film reveals an evolution in computing interaction, within a setting inspired […]
Tronic: The Cool Hunter
Posted in: Animation, cg, Design, directingN.Y based Tronic Studio recently directed and animated this spot for The Cool Hunter, with music and sound design by Q Department. Also, Tronic’s Vivian Rosenthal and Jesse Seppi were named to the Creativity 50: 2010.
Craft Director Studio v11.1.4 released
Posted in: 1Stardust\’s Holographic Worlds
Posted in: 1Nuke Dope Sheet
Posted in: 1Feudal Warriors
Posted in: 1I’ve camera tracked some footage consisting of a person in front of a green screen. The results seem ok. But I can’t get the tracker to lock onto the face markers.
What I’d like to do is get a good track for the face markers and then create an axis at that precise location to help with a face replacement test.
I know I can use the 2D tracker and then use these points as user tracks. But if I select these user tracks Nuke does not give me the option to create an axis there.
I have also tried to seed points on the markers but they just drift.
any suggestions? thanks in advance
I have never done any stereoscopic work before and I can’t get my head around whether this will work or not.
I’m just trying to remove some jitter or run steadiness, but it strikes me that an x,y stabilize in the left eye won’t translate directly into the same 1-point track from the perspective of the right eye simply because of the parallax involved.