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Plate / VFX Plate
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Plate / VFX Plate

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compositing green screen clean plate motion tracking vfx supervisor rotoscoping color grading

A plate is a raw shot of live-action footage that serves as the basis for compositing, digital effects, and VFX integration.

Definition

A plate (also: VFX plate or base plate) is a raw live-action footage shot that serves as the foundation for compositing, digital effects, and VFX integration. The plate contains live-action actors or objects against a background (often greenscreen), onto which CGI elements are later composited.

The term originates from the tradition of digital filmmaking and refers to the physical "plate" or medium on which film material is stored. Today, "plate" refers to a specific video file or image sequence.

Types of Plates

1. Green Screen Plate (Primary)

Definition: Actors or objects shot against greenscreen

Characteristics:

  • Main shot for compositing
  • Actor is later digitally keyed out
  • Background is replaced with CGI, matte painting, or other plate
  • Typically multiple takes per setup

Typical Resolution: 4K, 6K, or 8K
Frame Rate: 24fps, 25fps, or 48fps
Color Space: DCI, Rec.2020, Log (ProRes, ARRIRAW)

Quality Requirements:

  • Focus: ±5mm tolerance
  • Motion Blur: Consistent with shutter setting
  • Lighting: ±0.5 stop variation across setup
  • Color: Greenscreen 70-75% IRE

2. Clean Plate (Background Only)

Definition: Identical setup without actors/objects

Uses:

  • Digital removal of rigs, grip equipment
  • Background defect repair
  • Perspective matching for additional CGI integration
  • Fallback for poor greenscreen keying

Requirements:

  • Exactly identical camera position (±2mm)
  • Same focal length, aperture, ISO
  • No zoom, camera movement, or focus changes
  • Recorded immediately before or after the main plate

3. Reference Plate (Supplementary Information)

Types:

a) HDRI Probe

  • Reflective sphere with complete ambient lighting
  • For realistic CGI lighting matching
  • Capture: Multiple exposures (bracketed) for HDR reconstruction
  • File Format: EXR linear 32-bit, or RAW

b) Color Reference

  • Kodak ColorChecker or X-Rite ColorChecker Classic
  • White, gray, and color pattern references
  • Captured at each time of day (morning, noon, evening)
  • Enables precise color grading match

c) Light Reference

  • Actor or dummy in same pose, verify lighting
  • Before final greenscreen shoot
  • Shows spill light, shadows, contrast values
  • Critical for realistic CGI lighting

4. Motion Control Plate

Definition: Shots captured with precise, repeatable camera system

Uses:

  • Capture camera tracking data accurately
  • Multi-layer compositing with perfect perspective consistency
  • Match digital double movement
  • Stereoscopic 3D productions

Technology:

  • Robotic Motion Control Rigs (Technocrane, FluidHead)
  • Encoders capture exact positions (±1mm)
  • Repeatable to 0.1% accuracy
  • Cost: €15-30K/day additional

5. Stereo / 3D Plate

Definition: Plates for 3D cinema (two cameras, left/right eye)

Requirements:

  • Stereo baseline (camera base): typically 65mm
  • Convergence point: in front of actor's eyes
  • Synchronized capture from both cameras
  • Parallax control (no excessive jumps)

Quality Requirements:

  • Color & temporal synchronization of cameras
  • Identical focus planes
  • No flicker difference between left/right

Plate Quality Standards

Technical Specifications

High-End Production:
├── Resolution: Min. 4K, preferred 6K-8K
├── Color Depth: Min. 8-bit, preferred 10-bit-12-bit
├── Color Space: Log (Alexa, ARRIRAW, ProRes Log) or Linear
├── Noise: ISO maximum 1600 (preferred <800)
├── Focus Sharpness: Diffraction-Limited (f/2.8-f/8)
├── Motion Blur: Consistent with 180° shutter at 24fps
├── Compression Losses: Minimized (ProRes HQ or uncompressed)
└── Metadata: Complete (camera, optics, focal length, etc.)

Inspection Checklist for VFX Supervisor on Set

Before Shoot:

  • [ ] Check focus peaking
  • [ ] Confirm color space settings
  • [ ] ISO & lighting buffered
  • [ ] Greenscreen consistency measured (IRE meter)
  • [ ] Clean plate plan created

After Each Take:

  • [ ] Verify focus sharpness (histogram, focus assist)
  • [ ] Motion blur consistent
  • [ ] No clipping in highlights or shadows
  • [ ] Frame rate & timecode correct

End of Shoot Day:

  • [ ] All plates archived
  • [ ] Metadata exported (camera data, focus distance, lens)
  • [ ] Backup performed
  • [ ] QC report created

Plate Workflow: From Set to Compositing

1. On Set: Raw Capture
 ├── Record live-action footage
 ├── Capture clean plates & references
 └── Perform on-set QC

2. Data Management: Storage & Backup
 ├── Store footage on portable SSD
 ├── LTO-tape archivization
 ├── Cloud backup (optional)
 └── Metadata documentation

3. Post-Production Preparation
 ├── Digitize plate (if necessary)
 ├── Create proxies for faster workflow
 ├── Color space linearization (Log → Linear)
 └── Metadata extraction

4. Compositing & Integration
 ├── Import plate into Nuke/After Effects
 ├── Perform motion tracking
 ├── Rotoscoping for masks
 ├── Keying (greenscreen removal)
 ├── CGI/effects integration
 └── Color grading

5. Final Output
 ├── Format conversion (DCP, ProRes, etc.)
 ├── Quality assurance
 └── Archivization with project files

Common Plate Problems and Solutions

Problem 1: Motion Blur Too Strong

Symptom: Actor appears blurry, especially at edges

Cause: Incorrect shutter setting (too open) or slow movement with high ISO

Solution:

  • Adjust shutter speed: 180° is standard at 24fps
  • Make movements slower
  • Increase lighting instead of increasing ISO
  • In compositing: Apply sub-pixel motion blur

Problem 2: Focus Not Consistent

Symptom: Frame 1 is focused, frame 5 is soft

Cause: Focus puller error or incorrect focus distance

Solution:

  • Check 1st AC (focus puller)
  • Pre-define pull-focus marks
  • Encourage multiple takes
  • In compositing: Selective sharpness corrections (limited)

Problem 3: Greenscreen Spill Light

Symptom: Green shimmer on hair & shoulders

Cause: Greenscreen too close to actor or incorrect spill suppression

Solution:

  • Increase distance between screen and talent (min. 2.5m)
  • Add magenta backlight for neutralization
  • Apply polarization filter to keylight
  • In compositing: Use despill tools (chroma suppression)

Problem 4: Color Noise / Banding

Symptom: Visible color artifacts at low ISO or overexposure

Cause: 8-bit color + compression or excessive ISO

Solution:

  • Use 10-bit or 12-bit codec (ARRIRAW, ProRes Log)
  • Keep ISO minimal (<800)
  • Maintain good lighting instead of relying on ISO
  • In compositing: Apply minimal denoise (costs detail)

Metadata for a Professional Plate

A VFX plate should document the following metadata:

Camera & Lens:
├── Camera model (e.g., ARRI Alexa 35)
├── Sensor size (full-frame, Super35, etc.)
├── Focal length (e.g., 50mm)
├── Aperture (e.g., f/4.0)
├── Focus distance (e.g., 5.2m)
├── ISO (e.g., 400)
├── Shutter angle (e.g., 180°)
└── Frame rate (e.g., 24fps)

Color & Lighting:
├── Color space standard (DCI, Rec.2020, etc.)
├── Gamma version (Log, Linear, etc.)
├── Color grading applied (if any)
├── Lighting description (sunlight, artificial, hybrid)
└── Color temperature (e.g., 5500K)

Capture Context:
├── Capture date & time
├── Scene number & take number
├── Camera position (height, distance)
├── Camera movement description (static, pan, dolly, etc.)
├── Green screen setup (fabric, hard panel, LED)
└── Special notes (practical effects, safety issues, etc.)

Plate Storage & Archivization

Storage Media

Immediate (Set):

  • Portable SSD (Samsung T7, OWC Envoy Pro)
  • RAID system for redundancy
  • Daily backup to second SSD

Medium-Term (Studio):

  • NAS (Network Attached Storage)
  • Enterprise-Grade HDD
  • RAID-5 or RAID-6 for fault tolerance

Long-Term Archive (7+ Years):

  • LTO Tape (Linear Tape-Open Standard)
  • Climate-controlled archive
  • Annual integrity checks
  • Redundant tapes

Costs

A 4K plate (24fps):
├── Storage space: ~2 TB per hour of footage
├── Backup cost: ~€500 for redundant storage
├── Archivization (7 years): ~€200/tape
└── Total budget per minute: €100-300 (storage)

Notable VFX Plate Productions

  • Avatar (2009): Greenscreen capture of performance capture sessions, then digital characters composited
  • The Mandalorian (2019): LED volume stages with real-time plates, camera tracking integrated
  • Jungle Book (2016): Live-action actor (eyes only) against greenscreen, everything else CGI

See Also

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