Lawrence Karman
Active member
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2008
- Messages
- 40
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
Just looked a little more. Whats the RED 617 all about? 28K? Please someone, please some one tell me why I need anything in 28K?
Shooting translights?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
Just looked a little more. Whats the RED 617 all about? 28K? Please someone, please some one tell me why I need anything in 28K?
yeah we shot some with 5 x 617 cameras it was pretty interesting. those were film of course. one hour processing on 30 rolls of transparency wasnt cheap.Shooting translights?
BTW
i like how one guy that obviously doesnt have a great knowledge of the red cameras or the film process in genera gets you guys all worked into a frenzy.
i kinda feel like at this point threads like this should just get locked or deleted.
eh?
bigger photosites are less sensitive. Correct me if I'm wrong, but Monstro's dynamic range and readout speed sure has a lot to do with a certain pixel size. So, grow the chip -> increase the pixel count. If you want less resolution, downsize it. You'll get a great s/n ratio and thus maybe a stop or two more to play with in color correction.
Allen,
There is a fundamental difference in the programs that are developing the cameras for Panavision, Arri and Red.
The first point is, why shoot higher rez than 1080.
My answer: It looks better. If I shoot 4k, 5k, 6k or 9k and sample it down to 1080 I have more accurate information in that 1080 picture.
Assume a checker board is the subject. If the light bouncing off checker board is covered by one pixel, then that pixel will be a "average" of the different colors. That pixel will register as halfway between the two colors. Now if you have a sensor where the light bouncing off of each individual square is covered by a pixel each, now I have preserved the accurate information in the scene.
Why is RED making these high rez sensors when Panavision and Arri are not. Well first off, the Genesis Sensor is actually slightly higher rez than the RED ONES. How ever how Panavision / Sony chose to deal with light and imaging, that sensor only produces a 1080 image. Different ways of skinning the cat.
The Genesis and D21 are not bad cameras, they have strong points however the D21 and Genesis are two very different cameras.
The Genesis is, while built very well, built on the older HD tech. I feel it will have a ceiling that CMOS will and are already moving past. For instance:
To get a GREAT over sampled 4k image out of a CMOS I am looking at the 6k camera. 4k film out or 4k digital projection. To get a straight 4k image, not over sampled, out of a CCD (current Panavision / Sony builds) I need almost a 12k sensor. As is evident by RED's announcement I fell pretty comfortable saying a 6k CMOS will happen before a 12k CCD.
Who needs 28k? Well right now I see the 28k for very specialized applications. Visual effects will love it. More pixels means cleaner edges. Also that camera is (currently) shaped more like a still camera. A Photographer could just hit record and then sift back thought the video to get the exact frame to use, and use for a large billboard or other high rez application.
As was mentioned, Dark Knight looked good shot on IMAX. If the film version has validity then the digital equivalent surely has merit.
I understand your frustration. I have worked with MANY AC's on their first time with this camera. The RED ONE is already so different and now the DSMC system is yet another leap. Until the dust settles, take a Red Tech / DIT out with you. If they know what they are doing you will never have to think about anything behind the focal plane.
Top 10 reasons for more resolution.
10. So when the first time AC bumps the camera on the take the director wants the most, you have plenty of resolution to stabilize it in post.
.
By the way, just curious, which RED productions have you worked on?