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After Effects: Pixdither Plugin

What are you applying the effect to?

In the modern era of ultra-high-definition video and photorealistic rendering, a countervailing artistic trend has emerged: . Creators are constantly looking for ways to emulate the charm of 8-bit, 16-bit, and early digital aesthetic, bringing a "retro" or "lo-fi" look to modern projects.

Instead of just applying a static dither pattern, the plugin intelligently (or user-defined keyframes) and applies dithering that stays temporally stable—reducing flicker in animations.

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: Independent controls for vertical and horizontal pixel locking to simulate lower screen resolutions without changing your actual composition settings.

Embrace the pixels. Embrace the noise. And never let banding ruin your gradients again.

Import your footage, 3D render, or shape layers into the timeline. Step 2: Apply PixDither What are you applying the effect to

: Features more than 20 built-in color schemes inspired by vintage gaming consoles and home computer platforms.

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For the most authentic results, it helps to design with high contrast in mind. Instead of just applying a static dither pattern,

A retro look isn't just about patterns; it's about limited colors. PixDither allows users to clamp the color palette, reducing millions of colors down to a specific bit-count (e.g., 8-bit or 4-bit). This ensures your footage looks like it is running on vintage hardware.

By mastering dithering, you aren't just making your video look "old"—you're giving it a tactile, artistic quality that stands out in a sea of overly polished digital content.

Not every part of your frame needs aggressive dithering.

The edges of my pixelated shapes have weird semi-transparent pixels. Fix: You have Continuously Rasterize (the sun icon) turned on for a shape layer or Illustrator file. Pre-compose your vector layer without continuously rasterize, then apply PixDither to the pre-comp.

If using Custom , link the color slots to an external color palette layer using After Effects color pickers.