Tinderbox 2
Tinderbox 2 for Mac/PC, from Englands The
Foundry, is a set of 20 new
filters for After Effects. This is not a version upgrade from the popular and
useful Tinderbox 1. T2 is a sequel and entirely new product.
While there is some overlap in T2 with other products in the AE plug-in
market, this collection provides some unique effects and new twists on familiar
ones. All of the filters have a common control panel, which makes for a shallow
learning curve.
Not found together in other collections are effects such as "Blob,"
"Kaleidoscope," "Newsprint," and "Night Sky." Blob
creates shaded spheres (from one to many) that stick, deform and can move
independently. Think of this as your own little Flubber machine. Kaleid turns an
image into a kaleidoscope, with controls over the shape, position, and movement
of the "mirrors."
Newsprint will screen your image into grayscale or colored screens,
representative of the dots that make up newspaper photos. And Night Sky creates
numerous star fields and constellations, with movements like spinning,
clustering and forward/reverse. With Night Sky, sending your starship into warp
speed or through a galactic wormhole is easier than saying "Take us home,
Mr. Chekov."
The grain, blur, and painting filters in Tinderbox 2 are similar to those in
other products, including AE 5s incorporated effects. But the common
interface and a few different implementations provide users with new choices in
old standby effects. For example, you can find numerous Gaussian blur filters,
but T2s BlurMasked filter uses a mask to control the size of the blur. This
is a quick way to create accurate depth of field or rack focus shots.
T2 also includes lens flare, color bars, glass, ripple, stutter, wobble, and
swirl, among others. This package has so many neat filters that with T2 you
could create your own, well "T2."
Elements of Anarchy: Text
If you need to create hip text effects, such as those in "The
Matrix" or on The Weather Channel (nothing hipper than that), Digital
Anarchys Elements of Anarchy: Text is for you.
Designed to make the random text elements used in backgrounds of commercials
and films, Elements of Anarchy: Text (Mac/PC) provides the quickest way to
create and control these text elements. Although you can use keyframes for
precise control, the three effects have numerous settings so the user doesnt
need to set hundreds of keyframes.
The three filters in EofA:T include Text Matrix, Screen Text, and Text Grid.
Within each, the controls offer almost unlimited tweaking to create unique
effects whose only limits are the imagination of the artist.
At $79 for EofA:T, its probably one of the best bargains in AE plug-ins.
EofA:T can also be purchased with DigiEffects VideoLook for about $100 or
with DigiEffects Aurorix for under $300.
EchoFire 2.0
The biggest complaint I had about After Effects 5 was that I couldnt
preview my work on an NTSC monitor to see what it really looks like output to
video. EchoFire 2.0 (Mac only) from Synthetic Aperture solves that problem and a
few more.
How can anyone live without this product? Installed as a system extension and
control panel, EchoFire outputs the comp window from After Effects projects or
the document window from Photoshop to an external monitor via FireWire or other
video card, such as a Targa, Media 100, or Digital Voodoo.
In addition, any QuickTime-enabled application can output video and audio via
FireWire. Or any supported video file can be output using EchoFires
drag-and-drop movie player. EchoFire supports 4:3, 16:9, and 14:9 aspect ratios
and is compatible with NTSC and PAL. You can overlay a waveform monitor,
vectorscope, safe title, action areas and test patterns on the video output.
I found EchoFire worked extremely well. The output was clean and fast, and it
made a big difference being able to check my After Effects projects on a real
monitor.
Since its a system extension, and considering the complexity of
interfacing with numerous QuickTime-enabled applications, I did encounter a few
hiccups and freezes, and wasnt always sure why EchoFire was or wasnt
outputting video to the external monitor.
For example, viewing a streaming video from the web in QuickTime caused some
problems and a system freeze. And my version of Toast wouldnt recognize my CD
writer until I disabled EchoFire and restarted. These are the kind of kooky
problems that are difficult to predict during product testing; and another users
system may not react the same way mine did. But using EchoFire within the
appropriate situations was generally functional and problem-free.
Summary
If you had to choose between EchoFire, Tinderbox 2 or Elements of Anarchy:
Text, I would say dont settle for anything less than getting all three. You
can never have too many After Effects filters, and EchoFire is the best way to
preview your work on the monitors your finished projects will be viewed on.
Get em all!
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