http://dvblog.org/?p=2325
I just found this via DVBlog and loved it.
And wanted to share it, but I've given up Twitter and Facebook.
I don't know Brian Gibson
http://baiowulf.com
or the blog where this was posted
http://lucidunison.com
But I'll be checking them out now.
hahah rupert u just made my day... er... night er... morning?
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 12:26 AM, Rupert Howe rup...@fatgirlinohio.orgwrote:
http://dvblog.org/?p=2325
I just found this via DVBlog and loved it.
And wanted to share it, but I've given up Twitter and Facebook.
I don't know Brian
I am at doing looking at doing a 1930-1950 b-grade scifi film serials like
Flash Gordon or Buck Rogers
Has anybody worked with miniatures?
How would i do chroma key without blue/green screen?
tom_a_sparks
Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments.
but instead use OpenDocument
he should apply the same strategy with latinamerica. but it seems he still
consumes ´old media´, as he insists in that venezuela is a terrorist
country.
pepa garcía
http://teleperra.com
http://pepa.tv
On Sun, Mar 22, 2009 at 10:49 PM, Gena compumaven...@earthlink.net wrote:
The President
Hi - can anyone recommend a reasonably priced projector to show
videos/presentations w/my MacBook? Thanks, Leslie
Leslie Guttman
cell: 510.684.6457
fax: 510.576.1747
http://www.leslieguttman.com
Equine ER: Stories from a Year
in the Life of an Equine Veterinary Hospital
(Eclipse
Most projectors are Mac-compatible; you will have to buy an adapter to
connect to it though. The adapters are about $19-29 and are very specific to
your specific laptop. Most projectors are VGA, so you want something like
DVI to VGA most likely.
Aloha,
Rox
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 3:12 PM,
You can do Chromakey with any colour on the palette except for white and black,
which don't key very well at all. Indeed, I remember that during the 1970s and
1980s, UK broadcasters would often use a dull shade of yellow as their key
colour, and it worked perfectly well back then.
Also. if
--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, Ian Beaumont i.beaum...@... wrote:
You can do Chromakey with any colour on the palette except for white and
black, which don't key very well at all. Indeed, I remember that during the
1970s and 1980s, UK broadcasters would often use a dull shade of