I've used Nuke in many motion graphic commercials in conjunction with AE. Typically the AE artist renders out their little bit of animated text, hands it off to me and then I integrated it into the shot on cards, etc.... Same with a Cinema4d artist handing me a bunch of already cg motion graphics passes and I'm again, compositing them then yes Nuke does great at that. It really depends your definition of which specific part of Motion Graphics because there is a lot of overlap. I know many motion graphics people who consider greenscreen compositing on cards and moving them around as motion graphics.
Creating text from scratch, beveling it and animating it along a splineā¦.eh, not so much with Nuke. -deke On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 1:56 PM, emersontg < [email protected]> wrote: > ** > Thanks guys, I thought that Nuke could be an "AE node based alternative" > just like Fusion. > Thanks > > _______________________________________________ > Nuke-users mailing list > [email protected], http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/ > http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users >
_______________________________________________ Nuke-users mailing list [email protected], http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/ http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users
