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#1621 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 842
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Quote:
There is a MULTITUDE of reasons why changed might need to be made in post. But, you don't have to. The point here is the FREEDOM of changing those values DURING the shoot or AFTER the shoot. Yes, I read your whole post. How many different ways does the operation of the metadata in terms of shooting and the post flow have to be explained? |
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#1622 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 842
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:) |
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#1623 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 185
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#1624 | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 3,583
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Quote:
http://www.arricsc.com/pdf/2009_09_A...S_ALEV_III.pdf Quote:
I wish you DP'ed every shoot I ever got footage from. :) I've seen some very very wrong WBs in the past.
__________________
Gavin Greenwalt || im.thatoneguy im.thatoneguy[at]gmail.com |
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#1625 | |
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Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts: 40
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Quote:
Having the freedom of setting the whitebalance in post is a plus, and I gave examples as to why. Then you go about, saying that it dosnt work that way... David kept explaining what the sensor did and not did, having you on his tail, while I was sitting here the whole time thinking.. IT's IRRELEVANT. What ever is going through the sensor cannot be circumvented neither in camera nor in post. On the flipside you have exactly the SAME freedom to tweak your image in post as you have in camera menu system. INCLUDING WHITEBALANCE. and if you need a D.I. for one then you need him for the other. because it works the same way.. (ignoring the fact that David actually was talking about a difusion filter, which has nothing to do with the camera, the sensor, the file system, the light setting or the WB either) so again. Irrelevant. Even if the sensor is 5000K biased.. Irrelevant.. You cant do anything about that. Not in post. Not in camera before shooting. So here is the buttom line.. No matter what setting you chose to shoot with, you can reset it in post. Including WB. Therefore you have the freedom to shoot a scene with multiple colorbalances. You DON'T have to. but you CAN. (and of´course by can I mean, that it does not degrade the image by doing so with the red) Do we agree or not? |
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#1626 |
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Red Leader
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 5,342
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OK... we are probably getting near the end of this. Maybe RAW is better. Maybe whatever Arri is planning for Alexa is better. Maybe they will read all this and decide to do it different than they were planning (that is an option). Maybe none of it matters. Until their camera is released and/or we hear what their plan is... the speculation has probably run it's course. I started this thread with a "hats off" to Arri. I still feel the same way. 163 pages later...
Jim
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"Everything in life changes... including our camera specs and delivery dates..." We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone with a bad attitude. |
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#1627 | |
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Moderator
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 4,434
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Quote:
Not really. It's not irrelevant that the sensor is biased for daylight-balance; it DOES have an affect on your ability to white-balance the image even when working with a RAW recording. It definitely does with the old Red Mysterium sensor. But practically speaking, as long as the recording has a low level of noise to it, you shouldn't have much problem picking different white balances in post. However, also practically speaking, if a white balance was baked into the RAW recording, you're not necessarily locked into using it, again, if the noise is low enough, you have some flexibility in changing it in post. So ultimately it becomes a question of the degree of freedom or limitation in making these choices in post without artifacts showing up, and that has to be determined by testing. The problem of using your experience with RAW versus JPEG is that a JPEG is baking in far more than WB into the image, it's baking in contrast, lossy compression, etc. -- all sorts of things that make correcting the image harder. If this were about RAW versus a white-balanced Rec 709 gamma video image, definitely you'd be better off working with RAW. But we are talking about two different ways of doing RAW here, one with compression & no WB, and one without compression but with WB, with different software dedicated to the RAW conversion, with slightly different output RGB formats... all of which to day that the devil will be in the details. However, this may also be a case where Red's superior pixel resolution may also be a factor in flexibility in dealing with noise in different color channels if the final project will be downsampled. On the other hand, this may be a case where if the Alexa turns out to have a lower noise floor than the M-X sensor, it may also increase the flexibility of working with individual RGB channels. So all of this is a bit theoretical for now. |
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