Björn Benckert
Well-known member
I agree with you on this. I'm not sure why everyone is so defensive about this subject. You are clearly trying to point out a small shortcoming of the MX sensor with the hopes that RED will note it and improve it. I've been hoping for this kind of improvement since they announced a new sensor. Yes you can get there with the skin tones with some secondaries in DI but the RED sensor and color science COULD be improved for more accurate color rendition OVERALL and specifically for how the sensor sees and color science develops the skin tone. What Rob Ruffo is describing is what most DP's mean when they say they don't like the "skin tones" on the Epic. A lot of redusers including the guys at RED have stated there is no issue at all. But I think a lot of DPs see, feel, and experience a subtle but important difference in the way RED MX sees color compared to other sensors. As he stated, it's not a dealbreaker, just something that could be improved.
I'm not to sure it's has so much to do with sensors as I sometimes had huge problems with skin tones when I used to scan 4k 16bit film 12 years ago and also I have had great difficulty to dial in the skintones on alexa, phantom and a lot of other cameras.
There is so much in the mix, and the colour change need to only be so subtle to look wrong. Then instantly blaming the sensor when looking at an image with poor skintones is not fair. There is human skin involved, makeup, light temperature, grading and further more correcting the colours using the human eye and a colourist taste is not the right approach.
To me discussing skintones for an image and not have a descent colour board in the same frame and pick match the colors back to their original values in low,mids and highlights is just like discussing taste. Which to me does not mean much. Even a person with perfect colour vision can have poor taste and or probably do not know how to dial the knobs of the grading suite to mimic real life to a 100% match. So using the human eye as calibration instrument is purely stupid I think, the tests needs to be a bit more scientific than that to be called test's I think.
However I think there is really a lot of good samples of MX skin around so I do not understand why so many try to blame the camera. We had a high en Fashion still photographer shooting with our epic... He instantly pulled out better result than most and had no complains about the skincolors, on the contrary he was amazed that the epic sensor was so much better than what he was used to in the still world. Shooting medium format and 5D mostly.
Here is a screen grab from one of his shots that he shot with the B cam scarlet. I see nothing wrong with the skin colour, it's straight out of RCXP, it's of course with makeup and graded to taste but still I do not see the issues you guys complain about.
link to full rez: http://www.syndicate.se/Files/~usr/hawk/Bcam4k48fps.jpg