Kim Frank
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 21, 2009
- Messages
- 524
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Age
- 43
Im a director and DOP for Musicvideos from Germany.
Although this is my second post, I’ve benn around a lot in this Forum and must thank all of you for sharing your knowledge.
I shot six music Videos and a Shortfilm on Red within the last six months.
Because all of those Projects were really low budget and I dont own a RED, I never had time to do Tests and had to learn while Shooting and Postproduction.
One thing that came into my way was this ugly digital noise, happening when underexposing or shooting under tungsten light (or both) and I just would like to clarify if I finally do get it right. So here is what I think I know and I would love you all to correct me if Im wrong:
Many people around me (even shooting faeture Films with RED) think that it doesnt matter how you white balance or set your ISO cause its all metadata. They are right in terms of that you can change the settings later in Alert or Cine. But what they dont keep in mind is that the RED Sensor has its own native settings with 320 ASA and balanced to 5000 kelvin and is recording in RGB. If you now shoot under tungsten Light without filtering you do underexpose the blue channel witch means it isnt recorded with the full Bit rate. If you want to balance the footage back to 5600K in post or add a lot of contrast you have to bring up the low resolouted blue channel wich brings up the noise.
To avoid this while shooting under tungsten (or other low and really high tempretures) you have to gel the lights or put a filter in front of the lense to get it at leat balanced close to 5000K. Even if you want the picture to have a warm (or greenish or blueish) look, you should try to record all of the three channels balanced equaly and tweak the desired look in post using all the possible information of each Channel.
To get rid of noise caused by underexposure that needs to be brightend later on you should expose to the right (ETTR) always pushing the Histogram right before clipping in the Highlights or letting just the desired hot spots clip. And you should keep the dynamik range of the RED in mind and use more fill light in critical situations. Even when shooting dark night scenarios its better to not underexpose the full way. Just watch out nothing clips and do the desired darkening in post.
Hope Im right so far and didnt miss anything.
Now my questions I didnt have the chance to find out by my own til now:
1. Does the colour of the subject change the exposure of a channel.
For example if someone stands in front of a red wall or against blue sky.
Or is the exposure of the channels just about the tempreture of light.
2. What about mixed lighting sources or if the color should change.
Pretend you want to shoot someone in his car standing in front of a traffic light by night and you want to see the red light on his face, than let it change to green and as he drives along youre getting the normal Streetlights again.
I think you would have to use a filter to get the streetlamps right the all over leght situation.
Now you would place one red and one green geled fixture in front of the car and switch them on and off to enhance the effect.
But what happens to my RGB channels by doing that?
Wouldn’t while the red light is switched on the green and blue channel get massivly underexposed? Doesnt it matter in terms of noise, because I dont want to bring everything back to „normal“ white? And what about the contrast of the scene if the blue channel is suddenly underexposed, would that cause noise?
Or for another example what to do in a colourful lighted Club or at a Concert?
3. I don’t really know if this belongs here, but I think its importand in terms of noise:
Cutting in Final Cut but grading in After Effects I render out full res TIFFS of the edit.
What is the best Luma and gamma space when converting the r3d files?
Having both set to Redspace adds a realy contrasty curve for my opinion so sometimes highlight information gets lost. Setting gamma to linear light, i suppose doesnt add any curve but the picture gets a lot darker as well. Now you can increase exposure what does infect the colours. Or you bring up the Brightness what I do right before the Histogram clips. Is it right to do these adjustments in ALERT? I tested some pictures of a talent against bright sky where his face was very underexposed and I wanted to get it to normal. I rendered out in linear light without Adjusments and did all the brightnig in After Effects. My feeling was that this way caused more noise than doing it before rendering in Alert.
Is that because the brightness slider in Alert really uses all the RAW information possible?
And does it make sense to expand the Histogram by pushing the blacks back down to the low end using Curves in Alert?
I have to appologize for this long post, but I had a lot to think of in the last months.
Looking forward to read your experiences and suggestions.
Regards
Kim Frank
Although this is my second post, I’ve benn around a lot in this Forum and must thank all of you for sharing your knowledge.
I shot six music Videos and a Shortfilm on Red within the last six months.
Because all of those Projects were really low budget and I dont own a RED, I never had time to do Tests and had to learn while Shooting and Postproduction.
One thing that came into my way was this ugly digital noise, happening when underexposing or shooting under tungsten light (or both) and I just would like to clarify if I finally do get it right. So here is what I think I know and I would love you all to correct me if Im wrong:
Many people around me (even shooting faeture Films with RED) think that it doesnt matter how you white balance or set your ISO cause its all metadata. They are right in terms of that you can change the settings later in Alert or Cine. But what they dont keep in mind is that the RED Sensor has its own native settings with 320 ASA and balanced to 5000 kelvin and is recording in RGB. If you now shoot under tungsten Light without filtering you do underexpose the blue channel witch means it isnt recorded with the full Bit rate. If you want to balance the footage back to 5600K in post or add a lot of contrast you have to bring up the low resolouted blue channel wich brings up the noise.
To avoid this while shooting under tungsten (or other low and really high tempretures) you have to gel the lights or put a filter in front of the lense to get it at leat balanced close to 5000K. Even if you want the picture to have a warm (or greenish or blueish) look, you should try to record all of the three channels balanced equaly and tweak the desired look in post using all the possible information of each Channel.
To get rid of noise caused by underexposure that needs to be brightend later on you should expose to the right (ETTR) always pushing the Histogram right before clipping in the Highlights or letting just the desired hot spots clip. And you should keep the dynamik range of the RED in mind and use more fill light in critical situations. Even when shooting dark night scenarios its better to not underexpose the full way. Just watch out nothing clips and do the desired darkening in post.
Hope Im right so far and didnt miss anything.
Now my questions I didnt have the chance to find out by my own til now:
1. Does the colour of the subject change the exposure of a channel.
For example if someone stands in front of a red wall or against blue sky.
Or is the exposure of the channels just about the tempreture of light.
2. What about mixed lighting sources or if the color should change.
Pretend you want to shoot someone in his car standing in front of a traffic light by night and you want to see the red light on his face, than let it change to green and as he drives along youre getting the normal Streetlights again.
I think you would have to use a filter to get the streetlamps right the all over leght situation.
Now you would place one red and one green geled fixture in front of the car and switch them on and off to enhance the effect.
But what happens to my RGB channels by doing that?
Wouldn’t while the red light is switched on the green and blue channel get massivly underexposed? Doesnt it matter in terms of noise, because I dont want to bring everything back to „normal“ white? And what about the contrast of the scene if the blue channel is suddenly underexposed, would that cause noise?
Or for another example what to do in a colourful lighted Club or at a Concert?
3. I don’t really know if this belongs here, but I think its importand in terms of noise:
Cutting in Final Cut but grading in After Effects I render out full res TIFFS of the edit.
What is the best Luma and gamma space when converting the r3d files?
Having both set to Redspace adds a realy contrasty curve for my opinion so sometimes highlight information gets lost. Setting gamma to linear light, i suppose doesnt add any curve but the picture gets a lot darker as well. Now you can increase exposure what does infect the colours. Or you bring up the Brightness what I do right before the Histogram clips. Is it right to do these adjustments in ALERT? I tested some pictures of a talent against bright sky where his face was very underexposed and I wanted to get it to normal. I rendered out in linear light without Adjusments and did all the brightnig in After Effects. My feeling was that this way caused more noise than doing it before rendering in Alert.
Is that because the brightness slider in Alert really uses all the RAW information possible?
And does it make sense to expand the Histogram by pushing the blacks back down to the low end using Curves in Alert?
I have to appologize for this long post, but I had a lot to think of in the last months.
Looking forward to read your experiences and suggestions.
Regards
Kim Frank