Author Topic: GreenScreening - Using Paint.NET for blockland greenscreening!  (Read 864 times)

So, I was trying to greenscreen test for blockland, And as it turns out, It's not very hard, Just set tolerance to 30 with wand, Select greenscreen area, Press backspace, And boom. Use Paint.Net to get this result out of it.
http://imgur.com/G0xIHju
If I had posted this regularly, It would've been a page stretcher.
Oh and, Turn vignette off completely.

The wand wouldn't need any tolerance if you do it right, which is using environments and no bricks or whatever to get a completely solid colored background with no vignette and no ground, and optionally, no/low shaders to remove shadows but keep shading, then you could just use 0% tolerance and just select whatever isn't your Blockhead

This isn't green screening in the conventional sense. Sure, it used a green screen, but the actual purpose of a green screen is to produce a high-contrast background for moving video. If you're just doing a single static frame, any color would have probably worked just as well

I use white instead of green, lolz.

This isn't green screening in the conventional sense. Sure, it used a green screen, but the actual purpose of a green screen is to produce a high-contrast background for moving video. If you're just doing a single static frame, any color would have probably worked just as well
Wax 2.0 is a free program that I use for green screen in videos. The editor itself isn't really good, so I just export the file into another program.


Fine, I'll lock it if no one really wants to talk about things we could also do for this.