For motion designers, editors, and VFX artists looking to add that final 10% of polish to their work—whether it's a neon title sequence or a complex sci-fi composite—Deep Glow is not just a luxury; it is practically a necessity. It streamlines the workflow, reduces render times, and delivers a picture-perfect result every time.
Precisely control which parts of a layer receive the glow using mask references or luminance thresholds. Core Controls & Usage Radius: Controls the physical size and spread of the glow.
Deep Glow includes a built-in vignette feature. Why does this matter? In the real world, bright light sources often cause the edges of a frame to darken slightly due to lens physics. By adding a vignette simultaneously with the glow, the effect "sits" better in the composition, integrating the light source with the background environment.
Heads-Up Displays (HUDs) and futuristic interfaces rely heavily on luminosity. Deep Glow adds a "blooming" effect to bright white or blue lines, making them feel holographic. The Chromatic Aberration control is particularly useful here to add a sci-fi "digital glitch" aesthetic.
This allows you to generate massive glows without sacrificing render speed by calculating the effect at a lower resolution and upscaling it smoothly.
For motion designers, editors, and VFX artists looking to add that final 10% of polish to their work—whether it's a neon title sequence or a complex sci-fi composite—Deep Glow is not just a luxury; it is practically a necessity. It streamlines the workflow, reduces render times, and delivers a picture-perfect result every time.
Precisely control which parts of a layer receive the glow using mask references or luminance thresholds. Core Controls & Usage Radius: Controls the physical size and spread of the glow.
Deep Glow includes a built-in vignette feature. Why does this matter? In the real world, bright light sources often cause the edges of a frame to darken slightly due to lens physics. By adding a vignette simultaneously with the glow, the effect "sits" better in the composition, integrating the light source with the background environment.
Heads-Up Displays (HUDs) and futuristic interfaces rely heavily on luminosity. Deep Glow adds a "blooming" effect to bright white or blue lines, making them feel holographic. The Chromatic Aberration control is particularly useful here to add a sci-fi "digital glitch" aesthetic.
This allows you to generate massive glows without sacrificing render speed by calculating the effect at a lower resolution and upscaling it smoothly.