Billie Eilish FREEZE Effect in AFTER EFFECTS (Lovely)

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
This video is brought to you by Storyblocks Video Hey guys, this is Yannick for cinecom.net and welcome to another Copy Cat Friday, a series where we recreate effects from famous movies and music videos. And today we are recreating effects from Billy Eilish ‘Lovely’. [Thunder and rain] [Music] [Cinecom's intro music] Like I already said today, we are doing some cool effects from one of our favorite artists from this moment, Billie Eilish. The effects that we are recreating are from an older music video of her, named Lovely. In this music video you can see her standing in a glass box and on a certain moment water will flow over this glass, and then all the water will freeze. Well, believe it or not, we are going to show you how to recreate it all. Even the glass box. And no, we aren't going to build it for real. We are using After Effects for it. And do you know who also uses a lot of After Effects? Storyblocks video. They have a wide range of After Effects templates with stunning effects, like logo reveals, transitions, slide shows and so much more. But that's not all, they also have a stock video library that keeps expanding. For one single price per year, you can download unlimited assets. And If you want, you can start downloading right away, click on the first link in the description below. [Action music] Okay, now let's start with the first effect, which is the fake glass box. As you saw in the cool montage, we build a platform just like in the music video. You don't really need this for the effect. But because we are going to track our camera movement in post production, We need some objects to create depth and structure. And this is something you also need to keep in mind. Provide some objects in the space you are filming, this will help After Effects to understand your camera movement. Okay, now that the set is ready it's time to make your shot. You can make whatever shot you want, but we recommend to have a somewhat big movement in it. This big movement will give After Effects more information on the perspective. Okay now let's go to After Effects. Load your shot into a new composition and let's start with the camera tracking. Go to the right side of the After Effects and search for the tracker panel. If you can't find it, go up to the menu on top and to Window. Now search for the tracker between the options and select it. Now you can start the tracking by clicking on the ‘track camera’ button. Let After Effects do it's thing. It will Depend on the camera movement you made how long the tracking will take. Once done, you'll get these colorful points on your shot. Try to search for a point on the ground of your box or wherever you want your glass box to stand on. We are going to select the corner of our platform. You can select them by just clicking on them. Once you have selected the one you want, right click on them and select ‘create camera’ and ‘null object’. Okay, now that we have the tracking it's time for the fake glass walls. As a picture of glass wall is quite specific, the chance of finding it as a stock image will be quite small. So I decided to make it myself in Photoshop. Quickly explained, I just painted some dirt on the sides of the canvas with specific brushes. If you want you can download the walls that I made. Just check out the download link in the description below. Now that we have the walls, it's time to place them inside the 3D space. Let's start with the front wall. The first thing you need to do is make the wall a 3D layer by checking this box. To place the wall on the right spot I'm going to use the parameters of the null object. So select the null object and open up the properties. here you can select the transform property and copy it. Select your wall and paste the transform property to it. This will place the wall on the null object but also make it small and transparent. So the first thing you can do is set the opacity to 100%. Next you can start to scale the wall layer to the wanted size. Then with the x, y, z levers you can slightly move and rotate the wall so it matches with the scene. For the other walls you can just copy the first one and again move it around with the levers. And I say the levers, because these will give you the most control of moving the layers throughout your 3D space. As a final touch you could add some reflections in there. A simple way to do this is by taking a photo from the area opposite to the box. Before importing this photo into your composition, you can duplicate a glass panel. Under this duplicate, place the photo. Now on the duplicate, we're gonna add the effect ‘fill', because we are going to use the layer as a matte. But the layer is transparent, so we are going to check all masks for this effect. Then double click on the rectangle mask tool and the layer is filled with red. Now change the track matte to alpha matte for the photo, which we’ll use the duplicate as a mask instead of just being red. Then simply animate the position of your photo into the opposite direction of your camera movement. You could also change the blending mode to ‘add’ and decrease the opacity to what you find natural. The other walls work exactly the same. If you have done this all correctly, you'll now have a cool fake glass box around your actor. [Music] -Good job, Yannick you're doing a great job so far. In the intro guys, you saw that we also worked with real water and we actually tried making the water effect inside After Effects as well, but we find out it's that it took many steps to make it look realistic. So we asked ourselves the question: isn't it maybe easier to do it practically? And yes, it is. This is also a tip that I want to give to you, guys. Always ask yourself, ‘can we do it practical’, which is always going to look more realistic and better. Another example is where we once did a Superman lift off. You know where we had some sand shooting up in the air, We could do that inside After Effects, but throwing real sand in the air is of course much easier to do and it looks at ton better as well. So that's also what we did right here. We didn't recreated that entire glass box, of course, because that is gonna be really expensive. So we just purchased two very simple plastic panels, as you can see, and we would throw water over there. So Yannick would stand here in the middle and we'll have the camera over there and then it seems like Yannick is standing within a glass box. Now it was important that the water would flow over this panel evenly. So what we did was attach a fire hose to this plastic tube here on top, we drilled some holes in there and that way the water will flow easily over this panel. We also set it up a little bit curved and that way the water will stick better through that plastic panel. And then the front panel which works exactly the same, only here I had to pour water through a bucket. Standing on a ladder because we only have one fire hose here in the studio. In order to make the water flow evenly here as well, I kind of just taped a piece of tape here on top, and that way the water will be guided more towards the side as well. And that's basically it, also here we kind of have this panel a little bit curved so that the water will stick better to the glass and that's about it, guys. Okay, 2 down, 1 to go. So stick with me. For this effect, we are going to film frontal. Again you can do whatever camera movement you want. We are slightly going to move forward, closer to the actor. Also, shoot this in the same scene as the first shot. Your actor will still be sitting in that glass box and it would be weird if that changes. After you got the shot, go back to After Effects and load it into a new composition. Again start with tracking of the camera movement. And repeat all the steps from before. So when the tracking is done create a camera and a null object. You can again place all your walls in the 3D space. And now you have the same scene as before but from a frontal view. When you have got all this it's time to create the freeze Effect. First start with searching for a stock image of a frost texture. You can look on the internet for it, or if you want to use it commercially, use stock websites like Storyblocks images. If you have found the texture that you want, load it into After Effects and place it into the composition above every other layer. Now make the frost texture a 3D layer, and for the position we are going to use the same transform parameters as the wall it needs to be on. So open up the properties of the front wall, select the transform property and copy it. Then select the frost texture and paste the property to it. This will already put the texture on the same place as the glass. After this adjust the scale if needed. Now it's time to make the frost move and come in on both sides of the glass. We are going to do this with a track matte. So to make this work we are going to need a shape to use as the track matte. From the menu above select ‘layer’, ‘new’ and create a solid. Again, use the transform properties of the wall to place the solid into the 3D space. Next we are masking out a shape for the track matte. Go to the toolbar on top and select the Pen tool. In the composition panel you can now start creating a mask. For my track matte, I’m going to create a rectangle but on the right side I’m giving it some random shapes. This I'm doing so the frost will appear more natural. Next let's animate the Mask you just created. Start by moving it to the left so it won't cover your glass wall. Now enable the animation for the mask path and go further in time and let the mask move to the right over the glass. I'm going to stop in the middle, as I'm going to let the frost come in from both sides. Another thing I'm doing is animating the random side to being even more random between the first two keyframes, as frost can be unpredictable. After you are done animating the shape, let's turn on the track matte to see how it looks. For the track matte option you can select Alpha Matte. Of course make sure that the shape layer is above the frost layer, otherwise you can't track matte anything. Also, if you can't see the track matte option, simply go to the left bottom corner of your After Effects panel and enable the transfer controls pane. Now you should be able to see the blending modes and the track matte option. Okay, now you already have some frost coming in from the left side. But the edge of the frost is quite hard and not what we want. So first let's feather the mask a great bunch. But this is not enough. So, go to the effects and presets library and search for the ‘roughen edges’ effect. Drag that to the solid and from the effects control panel you can now start changing the settings till you find something you like. I mostly played around with the complexity, stretch width or height and the edge sharpness. Also if you have something you like, you can also add more feather to you mask. This will enhance the roughen edges even more. Now we have a cool animation for one side, for the other side you can do exactly the same. To make it yourself easy, select the solid and the frost layer and duplicate them. You can do this by simply pressing control+D. Delete the mask from the solid and create a new one. Animate it so it goes from the right to the left and voila! you have two frost sides. But it's not finished yet, first add the last details. The first thing to do is change the blending mode. Here you can go for ‘add’, just like us. We are also going to decrease the opacity as the frost is a little bit to much. The last thing we are now adding is some fog and this is done super easy. Just select the solid we created for the track matte and duplicate it. Again press control+D. Now take this duplicate and place it under all the frost layers. With the new solid still selected, head over to the menu on top and select ‘layer’ and then ‘solid settings’. Here you can change the color of the solid. We went for something blueish to make it colder. Once done click on OK. Now go to your timeline and change the opacity to around 30%. For the last step you can open up the mask properties, here you can decrease the feather a bunch and increase the mask expansion. Also don't forget to change the blending mode to screen. Wow, that was a lot! But all worth it for this very cool effect! And that was it for today guys, Thank you so much for watching and if you liked it, definitely press that bell for future Copy Cats. Thank you storyblocks for the support and, like always: Stay Creative!
Info
Channel: Cinecom.net
Views: 231,190
Rating: 4.9575944 out of 5
Keywords: Billie Eilish, Khalid, Lovely, music video effect, freeze effect, adobe after effects, after effects tutorial, billie eilish tutorial, glass, water, box, frozen effect, frost, after effects frost, after effects, adobe after effects tutorial, music video effects, freeze frame effect
Id: sb8Wv2eHH9U
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 13min 32sec (812 seconds)
Published: Fri Jun 21 2019
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.