![]() Do take note that you can import/open script from the commercial Nuke version without any problem. This means your script is gibberish when sharing outside of Nuke NC. You need to convert those files into image sequence outside of Nuke NC. I mainly use MatteOps and LensFlare from the Sapphire plugin but still handy as it saves a lot of production time. This is another growing pain to me as GenArts do offer a free 1-year student licence for their Sapphire OFX plugin which works with Nuke. Personally I find both Ultimatte and Primatte to be a huge loss but understandable considering it is a third-party plugin. ![]() Select nodes are completely disabled including WriteGeo, Ultimatte, Primatte, BlinkScript and GenerateLUT.You are limited to 1920×1080 aka Full HD for the project output.Here’s the limitation for Nuke Non-Commercial: If you are a student enrolling in VFX/Animation or related course, I still recommend getting the Education licence as it offer the full version of Nuke plus Mari and Modo and for a small fee of course (£150, €180, $250). While there is some gotcha for using the non-commercial version, the overall package is still pretty complete despite the limitation imposed. Maybe the use of Shake with its awesome random instant-crash left a big trauma in my heart during my internship period. With the release of Nuke Non-Commercial (I’ll be calling it NC from here onwards), I’m really happy that more people finally have access to one of the best node-based compositing program in the market.
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