Forum: Carrara


Subject: Carrara 3D info for After Effects

tkane18 opened this issue on Apr 28, 2005 ยท 7 posts


tkane18 posted Thu, 28 April 2005 at 12:03 PM

I've been going through some video tutorials for After Effects and came across the section for 3D channel filters. I know if you render out a Carrara scene in certain formats, you can retain 3D info such as distance and 3D position. After Effects is looking for this info in RPF or RLA format which other 3D programs support. Is there a way to convert the Carrara output to a similar format (even with a 3rd party utility)? Thanks.


falconperigot posted Thu, 28 April 2005 at 1:33 PM

Attached Link: http://www.smartconverter.com/

One format that Carrara uses for this output is Photoshop .psd files using the G-buffer settings. I really don't know whether it's possible to convert from .psd to .rpf (one coverter I looked at would read but not write the formats) but you might try the software at the link. Otherwise, cross-grade to 3DSMAX? ;-)

tkane18 posted Thu, 28 April 2005 at 2:52 PM

Thanks. I already tried this program and it looks like it will read RPF and RLA info but it won't convert to that format. It's a shame Carrara doesn't support this especially in the PRO version and because they advertise Carrara as "The complete 3D solution for web, print and VIDEO." Well, not so complete for video, I guess.


sfdex posted Fri, 29 April 2005 at 3:21 PM

When I've used Carrara to AE wanting to retain depth information, I render out to sequenced Photoshop files and use the g-buffer for the depth info in AE. Not the simplest approach, but it does work.


mdesmarais posted Fri, 29 April 2005 at 3:49 PM

Anyone know of a public spec for these file formats? A quick search didn't turn up much other than a reference to the MAX sdk. . . Markd


falconperigot posted Fri, 29 April 2005 at 3:58 PM

Attached Link: http://www.creativecow.net/articles/pfeiffer_jack/concepts/index.html

Well, the MAX SDK may well be your best bet as both formats originate with Descreet, the more recent RPF building on RLA. There's some info at the link but it doesn't amount to a spec.

tkane18 posted Sat, 30 April 2005 at 11:16 PM

Thanks for the info guys.