In the 1930’s Technicolor’s London lab came up with the blue screen process which better suited color film. Originally, blue-filtered imagery was motion picture in-camera special effects. Different colors? True and blue is better for blonde characters, green for everybody else. If you're wondering what the difference between bluescreen and greenscreen might be, well, let’s see. It comes from a product developed specifically for motion picture chromakey work, normally bluescreen production. Keylight is used on chromakey shots in virtually any major feature film you can think of. Keylight is a powerful plug-in from UK's The Foundry, (maker of the high-end Nuke compositer/VFX program). KeyLight 1.2 in After Effects CS4, under OSX 10.6 Snow Leopard, (but not 64-bit) with virtually identical controls. Keylight 2.0 in Final Cut Pro 7 under OSX 10.5 Leopard.
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