With Nuke Studio you'll never need to render out your source material for compositing, like you would usually do. It's almost as if Nuke Studio is the love child of both Hiero and Nuke. It has been designed to give you a full suite of tools for composting, shot management, conform, review and finishing for VFX productions, enabling very collaborative workflows. Once I was able to get the conform working, I entered a world of joy! Nuke Studio enabled me to edit and do compositing at the same time, all in one environment. You may ask why I would want to conform the whole film, and I hear you, but with independent feature films where the filmmaker is very hands on with the edit and VFX, a workflow which allows editorial VFX to be done in an online editorial fashion is extremely important. Having a multi-track editorial feature means creating “visual effects moments” to be timed with audio (such as, to the pace of a musical build up) (As with all conforms, it's all down to how big your project is in terms of media.)īut when compared to the likes of Final Cut Pro (FCP) and Premiere's reconnect media feature, Nuke Studio isn't smart enough when doing its conform to give you the option to skip files, and it has problems bringing in or providing a list of files it couldn't bring in after successfully importing the others (again Premiere and FCP do this well). One of the first things I did was to go into the Conform area of Nuke Studio, select all my clips and choose the Match Media function to point them to the source media. The interface all looks familiar and it's very easy to figure out what does what without reading the manual – meaning I could hit the ground running. So the first thing I did in Nuke Studio was to bring in my EDLs of the video layers from Adobe Premiere (Sync was edited in this). When I launched the software, it felt very familiar to The Foundry's conform, shot-management and review tool, Hiero. In order to review this software fully I used my recently released short film project Sync and conformed its entire timeline into Nuke Studio.
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