Originally posted by Profit0004
The additive blending is the only source of color =) The colors I am using are standard RGB at almost black levels, and gray at almost black.
Just because the colors right now are coming from additive blending of faint superscopes doesn't mean that you can't replicate the functionality in a better way, i.e. one which allows you more control over the effect of the preset.
It may not be important to you, but such techniques as using additive blended superscopes with a fadeout are NOT independent of framerate. This means that the preset will look different at different framerates (you obviously know this since you recommend 24fps). However it is not necessarily trivial to create an identical effect at a different framerate, however it gives you much more control if you can.
I would explain the exact code required if you are interested, but I think it has been covered a few times before in the forums... that and it is trivial to derive.
In the case of cloning an additive blend and fadeout effect it is possible though, although at low framerates or with highly fluctuating framerates you may get a sort of "jitter" effect (I have never been able to work out where it comes from exactly, I think it is something to do with the resolution of the timer or rounding errors though) the payoff is that it will look almost identical on any machine at any resolution with any framerate.
Aspect ratio correction is good too... can't see from the picture if you have done that or not.
Just 15 minutes until I can leave this god forsaken he... I mean work.
🙂