Beeble has introduced background remover, its AI-based rotoscoping feature. The tool is presented as part of a workflow aimed at processing video, image, and image sequence inputs, with support for up to 20 uploaded video or image files, or a single image sequence of up to 2,000 frames.
The feature generates an initial preview frame after upload, where the system isolates foreground subjects and removes the background. This first frame serves as the basis for processing the remainder of the clip, producing an alpha map across the full sequence.
An interactive editing mode allows users to refine the alpha mask. Users can remove the automatically generated mask and define new foreground objects by selecting subjects directly within the frame. The system highlights selected areas and applies additional refinement after the mask is confirmed, adjusting edges to better match the source footage.
Export options include RGBA video files containing an alpha channel, PNG image sequences, and black-and-white alpha maps in both video and image sequence formats. Output files can be used in external editing software for compositing tasks.
Visit Beeble’s website to find out more.







Beeble, not Beeple (Mike Winkelmann)