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Yes, I have Kelly's mid-grey cheat sheet. I ran a few experiments of my own on the Lastolite target, illuminated by some studio lights. Exposing with either a gioscope or Ed Lachman's EI Zone, and, shooting Raw, I set the target to mid-grey. I'll note that the goalposts indicated a slight underexposure when the grey card was "properly" exposed. Bringing the files into Resolve, setting output to Rec2020, St2084/1000nit max, I verified that the grey card appeared pretty close to the 34% on a video waveform. That is , also, consistent with Cullen's exposure chart, given that the resolution of Resolves scopes ain't that great.
I have just begun to experience the new realm of HDR color grading since I got my XDR screen MacBook Pro barely a year ago, so this kind of information is valuable to me :encouragement:.
I think ETTR is only good when you don’t have total control of the lighting, like in a documentary situation and need to prioritize clouds in the sky over midtone color saturation or noise consistency.
I've discovered a simple truth with the Lachman False Color method, at least as relates to it's use on a Red Komodo. Changing the in-cam ISO, as one might expect, affects the El Zone, whereas, the goalposts are independent of the ISO setting. This makes sense, as the El Zone method uses a conversion to Rec709. So, with the Red, ElZone presumes the ISO is set to 800. If I change the ISO, the mid-grey point shifts accordingly.
Ahhh, Rand.....I use a SmallHD Cine7 camera monitor. It has El Zone incorporated as one of the False Color Modes
Well, it's all learning for me. The Komodo has a Gioscope, which is advertised as a 1 stop per false color. The nice thing about the gioscope is that it applies to the log image(actually to the limits of the Red sensor) so it's not limited by the output transform.
Well, it's all learning for me. The Komodo has a Gioscope, which is advertised as a 1 stop per false color. The nice thing about the gioscope is that it applies to the log image(actually to the limits of the Red sensor) so it's not limited by the output transform.
Andreas Bruekl is another experienced colorist and advocate of ETTR (if memory serves me) who’s graded a bunch of HDR projects. I’ll see if I can’t find his thoughts when I return from work.