colorist tips

AUTO DCP - Try AUTODCP for free

Drop Apple ProRes or other video files into your Dropbox folder and automatically create DCPs!

Auto DCP - Interesting service for editors who needs to create Digital Cinema Package for worldwide distribution.

After you install the application, a special AutoDCP folder appears beneath the Apps folder within your Dropbox folder.  This folder can be managed and shared just like any other Dropbox folder.  And AutoDCP works anywhere Dropbox works including Mac, PC and Linux platforms.

Simply drag your video files (such as Apple ProRes files) into the AutoDCP folder and the application makes DCPs automatically!

TRY IT NOW.

 

The Cheapest Color Grading Panel OXYGEN PRO PANEL $800

Strong oxygen Oxygentec ProPanel MK II officially certified toner Taiwan 

A control surface is an essential piece of gear for professional color correction.

The new OxyenTec ProPanel's relatively straightforward interface accompanies the most critical elements for a control surface: the triple rings and dials for controlling shadows, midtones, and highlights. 

t just around $800, OxygenTec's board is most likely a less expensive distinct option for the JL Cooper Eclipse, the Avid Artist Color, the Tangent Element and even the more established Tangent Wave model. 

The DaVinci control surface maps a considerable lot of Resolve's capacities to devoted catches and handles, making reviewing a breeze. Be that as it may, its weighty sticker is out of scope for some. Fortunately, outsider surfaces from Tangent, JL Cooper,Avid and newcomer OxygenTec outfit a significant part of the DaVinci board at a small amount of the expense. With less catches and dials, you'll be looking through menus to discover the parameter to change, a long way from a major issue to numerous. 

The ProPanel is accessible now and incorporates locally with DaVinci Resolve, joining by means of USB. Beside the primary dials and trackballs, a few catches line the highest point of the control surface. From left to right, you have charges for

  • Undo
  • Redo
  • Grab Still
  • Play Still
  • Previous Node
  • Next Node
  • Start Dynamic
  • Mark for Keyframing
  • Base Memory (resets just the node you’re on)

No matter which model you choose, a control surface is an essential aspect of getting any job graded and delivered on time. 

Icolorsit Video Review

Davinci Resolve 12 - Beta Released

The latest version of Blackmagic's  Davinci Resolve 12, has arrived.

Davinci Resolve 12 - Beta version - Color Interface

Davinci Resolve 12 - Beta version - Color Interface

It has become so much more over the last few years, and in version 12, it's now a full-fledged non-linear editor. The free version is known as DaVinci Resolve 12 and paid version DaVinci Resolve 12 Studio.

They are essentially still the same products, and the free version still has the same limitations. With the nearly $1,000 Resolve 12 Studio (which is a free upgrade for previous owners of Resolve), you'll get support for multiple GPUs, 4K output, motion blur effects, temporal and spatial noise reduction, 3D tools, and remote and multi user collaboration tools. 

Whats New?

  • Enhanced 3D Tracker 
  • Brand New 3D Keyer for Color Correction and Compositing
  • Slick New Interface that's Cleaner, Easier on the Eyes
  • Multicam Editing with a Host of Sync Options
  • Improved Trimming including Advanced Simultaneous Multi-Track Trimming
  • Nesting Timelines for Working on Large Projects with Multiple Complex Timelines
  • On-Screen Controls for Manipulating and Animating Motion paths of Graphics
  • Highly Customizable Transitions Using Curves Editor with Bezier Handles
  • Real Time Audio Mixing by Recording Fader Moves
  • VST and Audio Unit Plugins for Full Control of Audio
  • Export to Avid Pro Tools for Professional Audio Mix
  • Improved Media Management and Bins
  • Download Davinci Resolve 12 - free version.

GRADING SHOT IN RED - LOG VS LINEAR OVERVIEW

REDlogFilm and REDgamma are options in REDCINE-X® that affect how digital values are translated into visible tones. This article delves into how these and other gamma settings work, along with how they can be used to simplify post-production—regardless of whether this is with quick dailies or manually-graded feature films.

REDGAMMA3

REDGAMMA3

Use RED GAMMA - For Instant Results

With RED®, the gamma setting may also be comprised of other tonal curves. To give images the more pleasing and familiar toe and shoulder characteristics of film tones, REDgamma and similar settings are the net result of both a standard log curve and a contrast curve:
The contrast curve causes shadows and highlights to more pleasingly roll off into black and white, respectively, and improves contrast and color saturation within the more visually important mid-tones. Images will also appear to “pop” since they will seem more three-dimensional:

REDgamma4 is therefore a good starting point and typically requires the least color grading. It is therefore an ideal solution when needing a quick turnaround time with dailies and other demo footage.

On the other hand, a contrast curve is more subjective than the standard log curve. Just as each film stock had its own characteristic look, a given camera model, software package or production company can all have different styles. A given look may also depend on the output medium, creative choices and scene content. As a result, such looks can complicate post-production if applied prior to grading or visual effects by third parties. If these considerations are important, there’s another option . . .

REDLOGFILM

REDLOGFILM

 

Use REDLOGFILM - For Fully Manual Grading

REDlogFilm provides a more standardized starting point for manual grading because it only includes a traditional log curve. The particular curve replicates the well-supported response of Cineon film scans, which ensures predictable results with custom LUTs and other post-production software. REDlogFilm can also be easily translated back into linear when visual effects, image compositing and color matrix transformations are needed.

A typical REDlogFilm workflow therefore includes first converting the linear REDCODE® RAW (R3D®) file into one of several standard digital intermediate formats, using REDCINE-X PRO® or other software packages. Then, the output can be shared with post-production houses and all other third parties familiar with the Cineon specification. The final result incorporates a fully customized color grading that utilizes gamma-encoding:

However, REDlogFilm images will initially appear flat, with lighter and noisier shadows, along with darker and more abrupt highlights. Tones retain the full dynamic range and are not actually any noisier though—they are just being displayed differently. REDlogFilm is also not designed for visualizing exposure in-camera.

One should therefore only use REDlogFilm when files are expected to undergo substantial grading afterwards. This may require an experienced colorist and post-production team in order to get results that meet or surpass what can be achieved straight from the camera with REDgamma4. However, for teams that are familiar with grading log film scans, REDlogFilm is designed to be faster and simpler.

In practice, gamma can be specified both in-camera and from within REDCINE-X. In either case, the setting is embedded as metadata and does not affect the recorded data until the R3D file gets converted into another format. If newer gamma curves are released, these R3D files can therefore be re-developed using the most recent color science.

Regardless, options are available for either common post-production route. With dailies, stills and personal projects, or when capture to post-production is handled in-house, REDgamma4 gives the simplicity and speed of a mainstream DSLR camera. With coordinated projects involving visual effects and third party post-production, or when libraries of custom LUTs have been developed using the Cineon standard, REDlogFilm gives the familiarity of scanned film—but with full digital flexibility.

 

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Get Inspired : Adobe Color CC with Lumetri Color Tool

ADOBE COLOR CC

Adobe Color CC is a very helpful tool for artists and designers that allows them to capture five colors through whatever is being viewed through their iOS device’s camera. And, it works flawlessly.

What makes Adobe Color CC so incredibly useful for creative types is that it’s so simple to use — simply point your camera and snap a photo. You’re then given an accurate color palate, including HEX codes and RGBS numbers to import into your preferred program (which is likely Adobe Photoshop if you’re reading this). After you’ve taken a photo, you’re then able to name your color theme for later use. The color theme is automatically added to your Creative Cloud library, allowing easy integration with Photoshop and Illustrator. The theme is also automatically synced to the Color service, which also allows you to use it in Photoshop and Illustrator, as well as InDesign and Adobe’s other mobile apps like Illustrator Draw.

Even though Adobe Color CC generally captures the exact color of an object, you’re able to bring the color into an interactive color wheel to allow you to edit and refine your color theme to exactly how you want it. Colors can also be shared, tagged and commented on through email, Facebook and Twitter, as well as other users of the Adobe Color CC.

Adobe Color CC is a simple but intuitive tool, and an absolutely necessary iOS app for illustrators and designers. Being able to not only grasp a color from the real-world, make it digital, and then edit the color as necessary is quite a useful thing to be able to do. Head over to theApp Store to download this gem for free.

Learn How it Works- Adobe Color CC?

LUMETRI COLOR TOOL

A true color correction panel into Adobe Premiere Pro is the best thing the application has seen in years. 

The Lumetri color panel brings simplicity and ease of use via Photoshop/Lightroom-like tools to an application that was extremely challenging to do color work with before.

Pros:

  • Super simple interface
  • Multiple panels that work depending on how you like to adjust color
  • Linked with Adobe Hue
  • Built-in LUTs that allow you to immediately play with color grades
  • The Color Wheel pane is designed very intelligently, and should reduce the chances of “over-cooking” a scene
  • Sharpen option works really well

Cons:

  • The built-in LUTs are only ok, nothing jaw dropping
  • Renders after utilizing the color panel can take a while to process.

Learn How to use Lumetri?

The grapherScope Try it for free - win/mac

HELPS TO LEARN, TEACH, TALK, CHANGE COLOR

SCOPEs for videographers, photographers, graphic designers and whoever want to learn, teach, talk, change color .  Application features-

  1. Stand-alone solution; for Mac OS X and Windows Platform
  2. Global SCOPEs like: Vectorscope, Waveform Monitor, RGB Parade, Saturation Spectra, Luminance Spectra
  3. Filtered SCOPEs like: Skin Scope, Shadow Vectorscope, Highlight Vectorscope, Midtone Vectorscope
  4. Up to 3 pixel pickers at one time for color evaluation
  5. Interplays with photo viewers, video players, internet browsers, photo editors, video editors, color grading tools, effect tools etc.
  6. Does analyze color in real-time 
  7. Tracks adjustments during color correction, color grading or retouching
  8. New: Organic adaptation to partner applications by resizable frameless SCOPEs, auto hide functions and GUI recognition
  9. Quick and intuitive access by few key strokes and mouse clicks
  10. Does analyze from any area of primary screen
  11. Stays always on foreground of all programs, resizable, can stay also on secondary monitor 
  12. Easy to use compare procedure 
  13. Based on YCbCr Rec. 709 color model
  14. Eliminates any influence of visual manipulation
  15. Helps color correction and grading in a non optimized environment
  16. Helps in case of broadcast save working

Grapherscope

Understanding Color & technology

Color is an extremely important part of modern filmmaking.The way we perceive color is greatly influenced by our cultural understanding. We all grew up learning that Fire is Hot and Ice is Cold. Therefor red and orange are warm colors while blue and cyan are cool colors.This association in our mind is so strong that filmmakers can actually invoke a sense of temperature just by the color palette they use in their films.

Lets understand color technically -

How Digital Camera Capture Color?

How pixel gets its color?

CCD

History and science of Color Temperature : Filmmakeriq.com

Color in digital filmmaking - Filmmakeriq.com


Make a Digital Cinema Package with OpenDCP for free

DCP- Universal format to exhibit your movie worldwide.

 

What Is DCP?

Digital Cinema Initiatives (most of the major studios) coined the expression when looking at ways of packaging Digital Cinema contents. DCP is a collection of digital files used to store and convey Digital Cinema audio, image, and data streams (Wikipedia).

A DCP is usually made up of large MXF (Material Exchange Format) and XML files.

Making a DCP means -

  • Creating the image sequence, from your digital masters, into TIFF, BMP or DPX will take up a lot of space.
  • Converting the image sequence to JPEG 2000 images will take a lot of processing power.
  • One of the great benefits of image sequences is that if you need to change a portion of your film, a shot or scene needs fixing, you only need to re-render that shot or scene and replace those images in your sequence without having to re-export the whole film.
  • The best format for your delivery drive (or USB stick) is Linux EXT.
  • One of the main benefits of DCP is the XYZ colour space, which has a much greater gamut:

How do I make a DCP?
Watch the video for a more detailed look at the DCP making process. In simple terms, it goes like this:

1. Export your film as a 16-bit TIFF sequence.
2. Use free, open source DCP software to convert the TIFF sequence into JPEG 2000
3. The DCP software then wraps the video (JPEG2000) and audio (WAV) in to MXF files.
4. The final stage is creating the DCP which generates 6 files that will be recognised by a DCP server.


Evaluating Your Video Color Reproduction Using Color Bars

QuickTime Test Pattern movie files are available for download on the QuickTime Developer page. These color bars have been designed to better help you to check the color reproduction of your QuickTime-based application or workflow.

 

The test patterns contain color and grayscale patterns that let you test issues such as:

a) 16 black levels on black (black crush test/range expansion)

b) Continuous gradient (quantization/super-black,super-white handling)

c) 100% color bars (matrix, color match)

d) 75% color bars (matrix, color match)

e) Quantized gradient (gamma)

f) 16 white levels on white (white crush test/range expansion)

These features can be evaluated by opening the test pattern in the desired application and visually inspecting it, reading back the display buffer pixel values using the DigitalColor Meter utility (see Interpreting 75% Grey Levels), or via a professional waveform monitor and/or vectorscope.

Which is the best cable for your video monitor?

There is four major standards:

  • HD-SDI and its 3G-SDI avatar
  • HDMI
  • DVI-D and DVI-I
  • Displayport

Here are a few monitors and projectors with their connectors:

  • Dell Ultrasharp – DVI-D, Displayport, HDMI
  • Apple Thunderbolt Display – Thunderbolt (aka mini-Displayport)
  • Eizo ColorEdge – DVI-D, Displayport, HDMI
  • Dolby Professional Reference Monitor – Dual 3G-SDI
  • Barco LCD – DVI-D, Displayport, HDMI, Dual HD-SDI
  • Barco 4K Projector –  Dual HD-SDI, Dual DVI-D

Graphic Card connection ports examples :

  • Nvidia Quadro 5000 – Dual DVI-I, Displayport
  • ATI Firepro S10000 – 4 x Displayport, DVI 

Signal conversion boxes or cards connection examples :

  •     Blackmagic HDLink Pro – DVI/Displayport, Dual HD-SDI
  •     Blackmagic Ultrastudio 4K – Dual HD-SDI, HDMI
  •     Matrox MXO2 – Dual HD-SDI, HDMI

The DVI standard has been passed over for HDMI and Displayport, so there will be no more updates. The great disadvantages of DVI is the lack of support for Y’CbCr and audio. 

The most important criterion when comparing video connectors is image quality. This one’s a non-starter. There is no image quality difference between any of the four standards. DVI, HDMI and Displayport are easily interchangeable via adapters or active circuits, while HD-SDI is the broadcast standard for monitoring.

What makes HD-SDI special:

  • Long cable length
  • Robust BNC adapter
  • Uncompressed video and audio 

HD-SDI is great for monitoring 1080p but nothing higher. Forget 2K, 4K or even still image files from modern cameras. If your workflow is broadcast centric, there is nothing better. If it is not, then HD-SDI is overkill, and limiting at the same time!

Advantages of Displayport over HDMI

  • Ability to daisy chain multiple monitors due to the double bit rate advantage
  • 2K at 120 fps and 4K at 60 fps
  • You can passively convert Displayport to HDMI, but not the other way around
  • Royalty-free, compared to HDMI
  • Support from graphic card manufacturers, the primary drivers for display
  • Support from major computer and monitor manufacturers like Apple, Intel, Dell, HP, and the like.

The relative advantages of HDMI over Displayport are minor, but strong nevertheless in a home viewing environment. The new Sony 4K monitor has been announced, and it has HDMI ports. So does the Redray 4K player.

For HD broadcast, there is nothing better than HD-SDI and 3G-SDI, period. However, for the studio monitoring environment, the order of preference for connectors are:

  • Displayport
  • HDMI
  • DVI-D
  • DVI-I

 

How to compress a video for internet?

Reduce size without loss in quality. If you’re using a professional NLE, then I recommend you compress your video from it.

If you don’t have access to professional tools, use Handbrake. Well, actually, even if you have professional tools, try it – sometimes it does better.

 

Youtube and Vimeo settings

What does Youtube and Vimeo have to say? First, check out their specifications:

Youtube Advanced Encoding Settings

Vimeo Video Compression Guidelines

 
In the case of Youtube, they recommend a minimum of 8 Mbps for 1080p videos, but would prefer 50 Mbps if you have the Internet connection to swing it.

In the case of Vimeo, they recommend at least 10 Mbps for 1080p, and ideally 20 Mbps if you can swing it.

The question is: Can you swing 10 Mbps or more? Most consumer Internet connections have fast download speeds, but slow upload speeds. At 4 Mbps upload, you will need to wait for 2.5 times the video duration for your upload to complete (assuming your video is compressed at 10 Mbps). What if your video is compressed to 20 Mbps? A five minute video being uploaded at 4 Mbps will take 25 minutes and will be 750 MB. A five minute 50 Mbps video will take an hour to upload and will be about 1.8 GB. A 50 Mbps video that is an hour long will take about 2.5 days and be 110 GB.

A slower Internet connection means more time to upload. If your video is really important, that’s what you should aim for. Look at your limitations, and work backwards. Don’t compromise quality by being in a hurry.

Okay, so why did I say 20 Mbps might not be good enough?

Youtube and Vimeo will further compress your videos if they see fit. You usually have no choice in this regard. I’ve found they further compress your videos by half. E.g., 1080p videos tend to become 5 Mbps and 720p videos tend to become 2.5 Mbps or so. It’s their ‘secret sauce’, which ruins our recipe! I mean, isn’t it easier for them to tell us to encode at their preferred data rate and let us manage the compression? We’re doing it anyway, right?

Here are some other settings to look out for:

Progressive scan (no interlacing) only. Leave interlacing to broadcasters.

Color bit depth is 8 and chroma sub-sampling is 4:2:0. Color space is Rec. 709, though it should be sRGB (the differences are negligible so don’t worry about it).

High Profile H.264 instead of Main Profile.

2 consecutive B frames, which means a keyframe every third frame.

Closed GOP. GOP of half the frame rate. Choosing the keyframe or I-frame frequency lets you control this.

CABAC – it’s just another level of coding that gives you better quality, but takes more time to encode.

Variable bit rate if possible, though I highly recommend Constant Bit Rate (CBR) if you don’t care about the file size.

Audio is AAC-LC, sampled at 48 KHz, at 384 kbps (stereo) or better.
 
As far as data rate is concerned, try your best to go as high as possible, with 50 Mbps being the benchmark. If your data rate is lower than this, you lose control over your quality. You should always test your videos in small chunks – don’t get lazy.


Director's Guide to Color Grading

Sure, you thought about your edit, visual effects, and music during pre-production… but you overlooked color correction.

This happens often, yet color is an incredibly important part of any film—a huge driver for mood and tone. How can directors and cinematographers maximize their budgets, collaborating with colorists to make their films look the absolute best for any delivery format?

“A lot of people underestimate what it takes to have something color corrected,” says Sal Malfitano. “You don’t want to spend your entire post budget fixing things when that could go towards enhancements instead.”

Best advice to filmmakers looking for great color on a reasonable budget.

  1. Consult a Colorist Early

Independent moviemakers should get in touch with a colorist and post-production house early on to begin talks for the look of the film. “Even if you don’t wind up working with them, it’s good to get a colorist’s point of view as you’re preparing to shoot,” says Malfitano, who recently graded the Safdie Brothers’ Heaven Knows What. “Many post houses and colorists are happy to advise filmmakers at this point to start building a relationship.” He recommends sending over footage and stills to a colorist as the project progresses, so that he or she can test out some looks.

In the case of The Invisible Front, director Vincas Sruoginis’s passion project about the Lithuanian Partisan Resistance’s armed struggle against the Soviet Union from 1944 to 1953, Nice Shoes’ Lenny Mastrandrea was brought on early in the creative process.

“We worked together with our visual effects artists to blend reenactment footage shot on a Sony XDcam with footage shot on 16mm film,” says Mastrandrea. “We were able to anticipate the needs of the film because Vincas met with us before the project was even close to being shot, which helped us marry the different sources.”

So what should you discuss with a colorist at the outset?

  • Camera: Let your colorist know what camera (or cameras) you’ll be working with, so he or she knows what file formats to prepare for.
  • Look: Being able to convey what you want visually is key early in the conversation. Bring references so that you and the colorist have something to look at.
  • Schedule: Give the colorist (and every member of the post team) a sense of your overall schedule. They can help budget the proper amount of time for color grading.
  • Budget: Each project will have different budgetary limits. Don’t be embarrassed about yours—be upfront. Most post houses will develop a schedule with you that accommodates your needs. The better prepared you are before you start color grading, the more bang you’ll get for your buck.
  • Final deliverables, like format and resolution: Your film might be shown in multiple formats (cinema, web, television, archival), so try to include a rough plan of the mediums you’re planning to exhibit with.
  •  
  • 2. Reference Film History
  • Chris Ryan appreciates a director that can speak in the shorthand of other films. “Having worked on a range of Criterion transfers [such as 8 ½, Gimme Shelter, and Richard III], I love talking to filmmakers who have an appreciation of film. When someone comes in and can give me a film that they’re looking to reference, that really helps me better understand what they’re going for.
  • “Look at Young Frankenstein as an example. Mel Brooks really wanted it to look like the originalFrankenstein films. Brooks and the DP, Gerald Hirschfeld, spent months testing film stock, lighting and cameras to make their film look just like old Universal films. Go shoot something, give it to a colorist, and get advice on the look you’re trying to achieve.”
  • Make Color a Part of Art Direction
  • No aspect of moviemaking is an island. Your cinematography and art direction should cooperate with color correction to produce the best results.
  • “I can work with you to make a scene ‘blue’ in post,” says Ryan, “but if you’ve already worked with the cinematographer, the gaffer, and the art director to establish a number of blue elements on-set, the finished project is going to be so much richer. Go out of your way to shoot with a yellow filtration if you want a yellow look in a scene. I can go in afterwards and give a scene an amber quality, but it would look far better if you actually lit it with amber lights.”
  • “You don’t want to come in saying you want a really colorful film when all of your locations and sets were devoid of color,” says Malfitano. He found that while collaborating with Joshua and Benny Safdie on Heaven Knows What, an uncompromising portrayal of heroin addicts in New York City, the aesthetic that the directors had captured on set with their cinematographer, Sean Price Williams, provided a very strong foundation for the color grading process.
  • “Joshua, Benny and Sean were looking to create a hazy, milky look, one that was flat but not flat, and desaturated but not too desaturated,” says Malfitano. “There is no true black in any of the film, which reflects the world these characters inhabit.”

 

  1. Prepare for Post-Production

“Proper preparation, at any point in post, will make it easier for everyone,” says Mastrandrea. “Prepping or fixing media costs valuable time that could be spent on developing the look of the film.”

If you intend to work with the original source footage, then your editor needs to ensure that the EDL, AAF, or XML files correlate to the raw footage and not any transcodes that have been created along the way. Make sure that the transcodes created for the editorial workflow are managed properly, and that the file names and timecodes reflect the original files. Project frame rates should match across the pipeline. If you’re unsure about the quality of the preparation, regular communication with the colorist is key. Most are happy to test material to make sure it’s in a workable state, and help you to get it where it needs to be.

Malfitano suggests anticipating how the film will be shown. “Have an idea of what kind of deliverables you’ll need at each stage of that process: from the copies needed for submission to what the festival requires if your film is selected. Big-budget films have the luxury of being able to tweak for a theatrical run and for Blu-ray release, but a good colorist can work with indies to craft a deliverable that’ll look good on any platform.”

“Factor in the delivery date of the film, too,’ he adds. “Work backwards from there to allow for at least a month of collaborating with your colorist.”

  1. Test Color Throughout the Process

As Ryan color-graded with Bassam Tariq and Omar Mullick on These Birds Walk, a documentary about the struggles of street children in Karachi, Pakistan, the filmmakers found that their initial vision for the color of the film wasn’t working.

“We used color swatches they had brought in as a guide to start with,” says Ryan. “But as we started to apply that look to a few scenes, we found that the muted palette was making a story that was already a little sad, too sad. The color needed to be a little bit more uplifting. After Bassam and Tariq screened the scenes we had graded for a few people, we went with a natural look that emphasized the hopeful feel of the film, working to bring out the colorful beauty of Pakistan. Bassam and Tariq were apologetic about starting off down the wrong path, but that’s what’s interesting about color.”

“A lot of times people get used to their rough cuts. They think that’s what they have,” says Gene Curley, who recalls working with directors on two recent projects to discover the look of their films. “Robert Vorkahl’s upcoming feature, Completely Normal, was beautifully shot on the Arri Alexa by cinematographer Brian Harnick. The raw images came up really clean and getting a nice balance of color was easy. But Vornkahl wanted the look of the film represent the unglamorous, tedious lives of the protagonists. So we actually skewed colors and washed the whole look out to give it a more desperate, bleak feel.

“The Graham Parker documentary Don’t Ask Me Questions by Michael and John Gramaglia, on the other hand, was a lot of older multi-format footage from concerts, interviews, and various performance pieces. John wanted a uniform look. By maintaining a consistent level of contrast and saturation throughout and cleaning up all of the whites, we were able to achieve a distinct look throughout the film despite the difference in quality of source material.”

  1. Good Color Correction can Save Your Ass—and Budget

Not sure you can pull off that crazy ambitious lighting maneuver on set? Remembering that your colorist can be part of your lighting crew may save you time and money in production.

“A colorist can almost be a gaffer working for the DP,” says Ryan. “We can achieve many lighting effects in a color grading suite that would be costly or time-consuming on set. A lot of times these things were impossible due to any number of issues: bad weather, time, talent schedules, and so on.”

That says, Ryan cautions against the dreaded “fixing it in post” mentality. “We can’t help out as much if a filmmaker captures footage in a specific location, at a specific time of day, and then tries to work in pick-up shots from a different time or lighting setup. A colorist can match the overall tonality, but can’t compensate for drastic lighting changes.”

  1. Don’t be a Helicopter Director

Finally, leave some space for your colorist to breathe. Once a filmmaker has gone through the film with the colorist and set the looks for each scene, it’s time to let the film go for a bit. Because of time constraints, it’s often better to let the colorist work alone, and then come back for one or two supervised sessions for any final adjustments.

“Once we have a clear direction, it’s just a matter of taking the time to apply that color throughout the film,” says Mastrandrea. “As long as I have a clear understanding of the film, I can really focus on making it look beautiful.” MM

This article appeared in MovieMaker‘s Spring 2015 issue.

4K Monitor for Digital Cinema Colour Grading - ColorEdge cG318-4k review

cg318-4k_screen_size.jpg

The ColorEdge CG318-4K appears to be Eizo's play for both its traditional market of particularly exacting stills photographers and for that part of the film and TV business.

Eizo has had an enviable profile among print and design people for a while, famous for displays which achieve more or less everything that the underlying technology possibly can. The CG318 doesn't (can't) have the same contrast ratio as an OLED, but it really does have absolutely everything else. The basic spec list is a worthwhile place to start: with a full 4096 pixels per line, it's a display of about 1.9:1 aspect ratio and capable of displaying not only the most enormous workstation desktops but also a full digital cinema 4K image, not just 3840-wide quad HD as with many monitors described more casually as 4K. Perhaps more importantly, the sheer physical size of the thing, at the best part of 32 diagonal inches, begins to make 4K readily viewable in a way that 24" quad-HD displays only really do if we lean in and squint.

 

Impressive contrast

The thing is, figures near £3000 are mentioned, which is potentially a lot for a monitor when Dell's UltraSharp 32 display, at less than half the price, is also an option. In the end, though, the CG318 starts making Dell look quite expensive, given the yawning gap in feature set. For a start, Eizo mentions a 1500:1 contrast ratio; this is both technologically feasible for a very high quality IPS TFT and readily believable in practice.

Just as a subjective observation, the amount of contrast from the CG318 is literally eye-watering. Selecting the sRGB preset, (much more about sRGB below) and cranking up the variable backlight theoretically puts the monitor way out of calibration, but boy, does it look pretty to the untrained observer. Just as a demonstration of sheer dynamic range, this setup produces a display which doesn't even begin to approach the sheer power of Dolby's HDR displays, but suggest what a practical, affordable home-user version of it might look like. In a darkened room, sunset shots are squintingly bright and blacks remain solid. The backlight only goes up to 300 candela per square metre, which is pretty normal for desktop displays, but the point is that the CG318 serves as a particularly keen example of something that's increasingly well-understood as time goes by: dynamic range isn't really about maximum white brightness, it's at least as much about minimum black brightness.

What's your angle?

While we're discussing contrast, we should talk about viewing angles. Naturally, as a TFT panel, the off-axis performance of the CG318 does vary very slightly. Within that limitation, though, performance is very good. The display enjoys a wide range of viewing angles with consistent colorimetry. Beyond that range, the image just seems to dim slightly, with none of the purplish or whitish glare that becomes obvious on many other IPS TFTs.

Colourspaces

So far, so good; the Eizo CG318 is an exceptionally good full-4K, high contrast TFT monitor, which at £3000 probably wouldn't raise too many eyebrows. What makes the display particularly interesting for film and TV people, however, is that unlike a lot of cheaper options, it has built-in support for not only sRGB and Adobe RGB, but also Rec. 709, Rec. 2020, SMPTE-C and DCI-P3 colourspaces.

The monitor covers 98% of the vast P3 colourspace used for digital cinema work. It is therefore suitable for more or less immediate deployment as a reference display in edit suites and grading facilities, producing anything from Rec. 709 material for current broadcast workflows through to digital cinema mastering.

Other than buying one of the 4K OLEDs, this is something that could be emulated to some extent using a lower-cost TFT designed to display Adobe RGB, plus some sort of colour correction device such as a Fujifilm IS-mini, or an HDLink 4K, should Blackmagic release one. Even so, the total cost of doing this might well begin to approach the value of the CG318 and the results would almost certainly not be as good, given the high performance of the TFT panel and backlight that form the basis of Eizo's display.

Field-ready?

With the ability to upload LUTs using Eizo's supplied software, the CG318 is also more or less ready to go as an on-set monitor, suitably flight-cased and with an SDI converter to suit its HDMI and DisplayPort interfaces (there are two of each, both supporting 10-bit pictures, although the HDMI is a slight disappointment being limited to 30Hz updates). Outdoors on a bright day, the black performance versus OLED might hurt slightly more, although it's hard to see this as a huge problem, given that the CG318 has at least as much contrast as many of the TFTs that are being used for this sort of work at the moment. The lack of an SDI input is a bit of a shame, although the overwhelming majority of Eizo's customers are still photographers and graphic designers for whom the feature would be utterly superfluous.

Calibrating output

Saving the most interesting for last, the thing that makes the CG318 look like a really good deal is the inbuilt calibration. Various people have claimed calibration for their displays in the past – the Dell UP2414Q we looked at came with a calibration sheet – but the ability for a monitor to actually observe its own output is fairly rare. The CG318 includes a mechanical device which swings a sensor boom into position over the display, allowing it to genuinely measure the output from the panel and perform a proper calibration.

Now, we have to reign in our enthusiasm just slightly here: a really good calibration probe is worth more than this entire display and there may be some question over exactly how good the CG318's inbuilt probe can really be for the price. Ultimately, without access to an advanced optical lab, it's difficult to qualitatively assess the situation, so I won't, but at some point, this is likely a better solution than calibrating once at the factory and hoping. Perhaps most significantly, the demo monitor is naturally brand new and the real value of a calibration probe is in ensuring that things remain in trim as they age. Comparison against a really good probe after a few years' hard use might be in order (Eizo warrants ten thousand hours or five years); shall we meet back here in, say, 2019 to discuss?

Conclusion

Overall, the CG318 is spectacular. It is impossible to avoid the comparison with OLED; the CG318 isn't one, but then it's something like two thirds the price of even an HD OLED, and it has inbuilt calibration. There will always be a market – high end film finishing in particular - in which the only fashion dictates that the only acceptable monitoring is either projection or a Sony OLED, but outside that area, in places where purchasing decisions are based on capability not branding, really good 4K monitoring is made a lot more accessible by the existence of this display.

TIPS : HD CAN LOOK LIKE 4k

I think people who make videos and films are sometimes a little unclear about the relationship between 4K and HD. The most important message is this: that 4K is four times the data rate of HD, and you’ll need four times the space to see it.

But while there are four times as many pixels as HD, but the picture is not four times better. It’s actually only twice as good, if you measure the “goodness” of a picture by the number of pixels in a straight line.

Just to be completely clear about this, 4K has only twice the linear resolution of HD. This has some very important consequences.

Perhaps the most important of which is that if you degrade the sharpness of a 4K image by as little as just over half a pixel, you might as well have started in HD.

Half a pixel! That’s one eight thousandth of the width of the screen. You do’t have to have much wrong with your picture to lose its 4K-ness in an instant.

Remember that when we judge the sharpness of a picture, we’re not actually measuring it. What we’re absolutely not doing is counting pixels and how they merge with their neighbours. We base our impressions of sharpness on - impressions. We can be fooled into thinking that a picture is sharper than it is.

How does "sharpness" work?

Do you know how the “sharpness” control works in Photoshop? Well, I’m pretty sure that it’s evolved into something quite sophisticated, but the basic principle is rather simple. Our perception of how sharp an image is depends on edges. The more distinct edges we see, the sharper we think the picture is. When we sharpen a picture, we’re not adding information. How could we be? If adding information was that easy then I could just write half this article and move the "detail" slider another fifity percent and it would be finished!

What we’re doing is saying “whenever you see an element in the image that is changing more rapidly than the others, make it change even more rapidly".

 Make it sharper, in other words.

The sharpness of an image depends on frequency response. That probably sounds like it should be in an article about audio rather than video, but there’s really no difference. Think of a chessboard. If you were to scan a laser beam across the surface and measure the reflections, you’d essentially get no reflection from the black squares, and a 100% reflection from the white ones. When you move from black to white, the change should be instant, subject only to the width of the laser beam.

That instantaneous change represents a high frequency at that instant. Whether you actually see an instantaneous change depends on the ability of your recording, transmission and display system to reproduce it.

High frequencies mean more information. If you want to reproduce twice the frequency, then, in a digital system, you have to have twice the sample rate. That means twice the data. One of the easiest ways to reduce data rates is to limit high frequencies. In a sense, all you need to reduce your data rate by half or more is to introduce a low-pass filter (one that only lets lower frequencies through). Most recording, transmission and display systems do this anyway in the way that they handle the information and it’s certainly a fundamental aspect of the way that most codecs work.

Let’s go back to the chessboard. What’s the effect of filtering the high frequencies out? The edges between the squares look blurred. They look like that because there’s less information to describe exactly where they are. Remember: sharpness is all about information.

Artificially boosting high frequencies in an HD image can make it look significantly sharper - enough, perhaps, to make it look like it’s 4K.

Post produce at 4K

Another way you can sneakily bounce your HD material into the 4K domain is to post produce it at 4K resolution. Again, it’s not going to magically capture 4 times the number of pixels but any effects you do will be in 4K.  For example, you might want to apply a look or some kind of artistic effect. To the extent that the effect changes the pixels, it will “create” new 4K ones. This isn’t magic: it’s an illusion, but it’s a valid one.

You can also add “clues” to 4K resolution by adding titles. These will be rendered at whatever resolution you set your project to. So if you set it to 4K, your titles will be at 4K, whatever the original resolution of your material.

But, do you know the best way to make your productions look like 4K?

Shoot them well in HD.

To "shoot well" you have to pay attention to quite a lot of things.

For a start, use a good camera

That should do without saying, but it often doesn't. It doesn't matter if the camera says 4K on the tin; if it's not a good camera (which can mean a number of different things) then however hard you try to get everything else right, it's not going to make your HD look like 4K.

Expose correctly

Especially if you're recording to an 8 bit codec, you need to make sure you're using every one of the available bits for distinguishing between light and dark pixels.

Light correctly

Personally, I've never understood the obsession with low light performance of a camera. Just because your device can capture video by candlelight doesn't mean you should skimp on lighting! There's more to lighting than mere quantities of photons landing on sensor elements. There's the direction they're coming from, and the overall contrasts in the scene. If you're going to the trouble of lighting a scene, you might as well do it, you know, brightly.

Use good lenses

If your lenses aren't sharp, then your video isn't going to even look like HD - never mind 4K. And make sure you know how to focus with them: basic, yes; but often overlooked.

Use a smaller sensor!

I know this cuts across what is probably the biggest trend in film making of the last five years, but, honestly, I'd rather get the shot than have to discard sixteen takes because they're out of focus. Shallow depth of field is just one of a multitude of cinematic effects. It's not a panacea and in the wrong place at the wrong time it can be an absolute menace. Any number of times I've captured an image only to find out that the tip of the subject's nose is in focus while their eye lashes are blurred.

Of course big feature film budgets allow for experienced focus-pullers. But if it's just you and a DSLR, who's going to pull focus for you? And without proper cinema-type markings on the lens, it's going to be largely impossible anyway.

 It's a good idea to try to record at high bitrates, or uncompressed. You can do either of these if you have the right type of external (HDMI or SDI) recorder. Most external recorders will record to 10 bit ProRes at up to around 220 Mbit/s. It's an edit-friendly format, with every frame encoded individually so there's no dependency on previous frames, and recording in 10 bits gives a significant amount of additional headroom for post-processing, even if your original signal was only 8 bit.

HD rules in the cinema!

There is a camera that pretty much puts all of this (apart from the bit about the small sensor) into practise. How many times have you heard that Skyfall, Hugo or Game of Thrones wasn't sharp enough? Exactly none, I would imagine, even though, with the exception of Game of Thrones, which was made for TV (widely praised for its production values), these films have been seen on the biggest screens and scrutinised by the most critical of critics. Absolutely none have said it's not sharp enough for the cinema.

What this proves, I think, is not only that HD is good enough, but that it can functionally substitute for 4K and no one is any the wiser. There are far more important elements that make up a picture than the sheer number of pixels. Your brain does a lot of the work.

Think about your school playing field, or your favourite park when you were growing up. Zoom in on the grass so that you can see the blades waving in the wind. Now focus on a single blade of grass. Look at the markings, the nature of the edge; how it reacts when it catches the sun.

Were you able to do that? Most people can. It's incredible (literally) when you think about it. And absolutely none of that thought experiment has anything to do with resolution.

As we've said before, if you can acquire in 4K, then do so: it's able to make HD look better when downsampled: turning 4:2:0 into 4:4:4 for example.

But if you shoot in HD in the right way, taking all the steps mentioned above (and some, undoubtedly that we haven't mentioned) then you can put your HD material on a 4K screen, and still enjoy the view.

 

Learn Depth of Field with this Powerful (& Free) Online DOF Simulator

A Polish software engineer (and amateur photographer) named Michael Bemowski recently put together one of the most helpful depth of field tools out there, and the best part is that it's completely free. The tool, which you can find here, allows you to manipulate every camera and lens setting that affects depth of field, from sensor size to focal length, from aperture to the distance between the subject and the camera. Plus it gives you a handy visual approximation of what each specific set of parameters would look like in a real world setting.

n order to make this tool as accessible as possible, you can download a version of it that runs offline on any operating system, and there is a dedicated mobile version as well, so you can access it anywhere at any time. 

NUCODA

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All about LUTS

LUT means “Look Up Table.”

A LUT (Lookup Table) is essentially the modifier between two images, the original image and the displayed image, based on a mathematical formula. There are different types of LUTS – viewing, transform, calibration, 1D and 3D.

It’s helpful to think of it like a math problem: R= S+L
“R” being your result or what you want to attain.
“S” being your source or what you start with.
“L” being your LUT or the difference needed to make up between your source and your desired outcome.

In all cases of LUT use, the LUT is the means to make up the difference between source and result.((All cases assume the colorist (or you) is grading through a correctly calibrated monitor for evaluation and finishing. LUTs in no way replace proper calibration or color correction. They only assist in the process.)) It’s never the result by itself. How does this play out? I’ll layout a couple probably over-simplified examples:

Types of Lut

1D, or one dimensional, LUTs are LUTs that usually have an exact output value for a corresponding input value. 1D LUTs are limited in that they cannot alter color saturation without affecting contrast or brightness along with it.
1D Luts are excellent for setting contrast, the white point of a display, or overall color balance adjustments  but they do little to convey the complexities needed for creating a good looking image when grading.

BMCC FILM LOG - 1 D LUT Applied

BMCC FILM LOG - 1 D LUT Applied

3D, or three dimensional, LUTs are LUTs that affect a coordinate set of colors. As an example, an RGB coordinate of (0, 0, 448) would be directly transformed to (128, 0, 832). If a 3D LUT had corresponding matches for each coordinate set, the files would be large and difficult for software to use. 3D LUTs usually have a set of 17 coordinates on each axis (red, green, and blue) from which other values are interpolated to various levels of accuracy.
3D LUT places color and luma in a 3D space (often referred to as a cube) that’s much more representative of how color works in the real world. And for our purposes, a 3D LUT is much more useful for capturing and relaying complex color grades than a 1D LUT.

BMCC FILM LOG- 3D LUT APPLIED

BMCC FILM LOG- 3D LUT APPLIED

 

LUT Formats

There are a number of LUT formats in use today including Iridas .cube, Iridas, .look, S.two LUT, Blackmagic Gamma Table, Clipster LUT, Sony SRW LUT, FilmLight TrueLight LUT, Thomas LUTher Box LUT, 3DL, ASC CDL, CineSpace LUT, and Luster LUT. Besides inherent differences between 1D and 3D LUT files, these formats are vastly similar in that they contain lists of color values or coordinates. Iridas provides examples of some LUT formats in their online documentation.

Programs like Adobe Speedgrade, Adobe After Effects, Adobe Photoshop, and Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve support multiple formats.

LUT Bit Depth

LUTs usually provide an accuracy of 8 bits (values 0-255), 10 bits (values 0-1023), 12 bits (values 0-4095) or 32-bit floating point (values from 0.0-1.0). Most programs will create new values linearly to make up for differences in bit depth (i.e. an 8-bit LUT applied to 10-bit video) which allows for smoother color transition and reduced banding.

LUT vs. ICC

ICC color profiles are another way of changing color but are usually reserved for input (called scene referred) or output (called display referred) calibration and matching. Proper color matching requires both an input and output profile. These profiles are linked by conversion to an intermediate color space like CIELAB (L*a*b*) or CIEXYZ so Device A can reliably work with Output A, B, or C. LUTs are considered a direct transformation and are far less useful for calibration purposes unless the LUT was designed with both a specific input and output in mind.

BMCC Film Log - 3D LUT applied (Cave Dwellers) 

BMCC Film Log - 3D LUT applied (Cave Dwellers) 

 

Color Correction
A very common example is printing your final film to…real, actual film. Print film came in a variety of flavors and styles. Each style had different nuances in color. The film lab would have all that nuance information or be able to send you a print test to work with. That would be your final result. The colorist grades a picture on his calibrated monitor but if he were to send that to print, it could come out looking far different due to the nuances of the physical film.

So in our math analogy, his graded film is “S” and his film print is “R.” He then uses the information from the film lab or on his own, creates and applies the LUT or the “L” to get him from his graded film to the print and to have it look as intended after it’s on the physical film. After applying the LUT, his graded film may look awful on his monitor, but will come out correct on the film print.

BMCC Film Log - Color graded by Sudip Shrestha

BMCC Film Log - Color graded by Sudip Shrestha

COlOR GRADING NODE STRUCTURE IN DAVINCI RESOLVE 11 (CLIP/TIMELINE)

COlOR GRADING NODE STRUCTURE IN DAVINCI RESOLVE 11 (CLIP/TIMELINE)


Color Calibration
The other option our colorist could take is to apply his film information to his monitor first -- before starting in on his color correction -- so he’s grading as if his movie is already on film. It looks good to him on his monitor now, but if he were to grade the entire film and then upload it to the web or play a different project through his monitor, it wouldn’t look correct because he applied his LUT to his monitor first. While this is a common method to calibrate monitors for normal REC709 and P3 grading, that’s more advanced than I want to get into right now.


The key takeaway here is that LUTs are not used to creatively grade a final result, they’re used to make up a difference between a source and a result. In practical application -- with theCineStyle profile, for instance -- the LUT will let you view your footage during editing more naturally than the flat, desaturated image originally recorded. However, it’s best to remove it for final color grading and rely on your properly calibrated monitor to tell you what color it is and yourself to determine what color it should be. If not used carefully, improper LUT use could screw up your footage or limit your image manipulation options in post.

Nobody says you can’t apply a LUT for a creative grade, but be forewarned: if your shots don't match each other to begin with, they're not going to match after you’ve applied the LUT. In this instance, you’ve basically turned the LUT into a glorified color correction filter, which is not what it's intended to be.

Are LUTs perfect?

BMCC  Film Log - 3D LUT applied (Kodak 2383 D65)

BMCC  Film Log - 3D LUT applied (Kodak 2383 D65)

No, they’re not. To achieve speed, they must sacrifice accuracy. E.g., a 10-bit image has 1024 values per channel. R x G x B = 1024 x 1024 x 1024 = a billion colors. For all practical purposes, a 3D LUT cannot be one billion pieces big, or it will defeat the purpose.

Instead, what LUT generators do is define the size of the LUT to a number that achieves good approximation for practical purposes. A common number is 17 points, instead of 1024. 17 x 17 x 17 = 4,913. Isn’t this way low? Actually, no, because the human eye isn’t that perfect. The 3D LUT only calculates these points, and the rest are interpolated (also calculated, but in a ‘broad mathematical sweep’ sort of way).

There is a lot of discussion about whether LUTs are good for critical color grading work. Some people think they are a travesty, while others welcome them. One place where LUTs are definitely valuable is in monitor calibration and viewing, quick image processing on set and computer graphics applications.

When you’re choosing between a 1D LUT and a 3D LUT, go for the option that makes your life easier. Both are compromises. Sad, but true. If they were perfect, they would too large and too slow to be useful for our crazy budgets.

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