Clark Dunbar
Mammoth HD
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- Mar 18, 2007
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Hey Neil, you mind posting your skin-matched results?
I gotta be honest, in those chip-chart matched "hollywood DI" CML files the Alexa looks (I guess subjectively) head and shoulders above Epic (and everything else)... The BMCC colours look pretty awesome too. The Epic shot looks like it needs the mids (in the skintones) brought down further. While that's certainly possible, it's giant pain in the ass.
... to mach the skin tone of female subject as best he could and not to worry too much about the RGB values of the chip charts.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, I'm looking off a non-pro display. And, yes, I completely agree that a professional environment is where "real" decisions should be made. That said, if the Alexa looks pimp on my crappy MBP, I'm confident that it'll look as good (or better) on a professional display/theatre. While the Epic may look great (or in this case "identical" to an Alexa) on a pro theatre/display, it raises a red flag that it doesn't look as good as the Alexa on a non-pro display (given that the Alexa still looks great).
Anecdotally, I just noticed in the skin-balanced frames, the BMCC, F65, and Alexa all seem to keep their RGB chips roughly the same, whereas the F55, Epic, and C500 lean far more towards purple in the blue channel. It's also crazy how the Epic looks softer than the Alexa (does that have internal auto-sharpening?) and BMCC (which is only 2.5k, but sans OLPF)... It's essentially double the resolution of both.
Not sure how relevant this is, but here you go.... Alexa and RedMX from the CML test. I did make a slight curve adjustment in photoshop.
Do not watch if you are sensitive to flashing images.QUOTE]
Yikes! ... as you say, not for those sensitive to flashing images :-( ... interesting "side-by'side" comparison .... joking aside, even on my rdMBP I'd be hard pressed to say which of those two stills looked "better" (what ever that may mean) and even which is from which camera .... they both looked pretty good and very close in terms of skin tones.
Another aspect of how we approached Geoff's comparison test, as an alternative to doing just a technical match on the grey scale in the chip chart, was to ask the question - how easy was it to dial the images in and get them looking good? ... that's again where you see a difference in the underlying color science and sensor characteristics of each of the cameras ... a skilled and experienced colorist like Aaron can (with a bit of help from the DP) work wonders on most digital footage but how long it takes him to find the sweet spot varies a lot based on the camera in question. In Geoff's test, because he was able to control the lighting and set-up fairly well between each camera, Aaron was able to dial in the Alexa and the EPIC pretty quickly and easily whereas the other cameras took a little longer and required more tweaking.
I'd be interested to know how much relative time you spent in Photoshop finessing the Alexa versus the EPIC? ... did you try the other cameras? ... if you could combine all the cameras together, is there a way you could slow down the flash rate a smidgen or two?
Of course, looking at still images gives you only half the story of how well a movie camera performs ... how each one handles temporal resolution as well as spatial resolution is the acid test in our industry ... more on that in the follow up posting below.
Thanks,
Neil
Appreciate your input and eyes-on experience Neil (and it's all stuff I agree with, I just tend to lean toward devil's advocate and have a bit skepticism due to real-world/real-work results).
As with anything, I tend to light my stuff according to the camera/sensor being used anyway (most often MX) so it generally looks pretty good. That said, I have a slight distaste for people saying that Epic is as good as other cameras 'because it's raw, so you can do whatever you want with the image; plus it's 5k' (or something along those lines). A few other cameras just hit colour/skintones/what-have-you out of the park directly out of the gate - no fuss, no muss. Moreover, when a 2.8k image upscaled to UHD looks eerily similar (in terms of sharpness) to 5k@UHD, I honestly wonder if applying post-sharpening (to get an image as sharp as you'd expect 5k@4k to be) is actually worth the render time.
Anyway, again, thanks for pointing out the caveats. While MM makes some very valid points in terms of pipeline and finding a "base" image (It's like the tests they do with police line-ups; a more accurate scenario is to compare them one at a time, rather than to each other), I do like knowing that the flesh tones of all the cameras can, more or less (more for MX, less for maybe C500), can match.
Not sure how relevant this is, but here you go.... Alexa and RedMX from the CML test. I did make a slight curve adjustment in photoshop.
Do not watch if you are sensitive to flashing images.QUOTE]
Yikes! ... as you say, not for those sensitive to flashing images :-( ... interesting "side-by'side" comparison .... joking aside, even on my rdMBP I'd be hard pressed to say which of those two stills looked "better" (what ever that may mean) and even which is from which camera .... they both looked pretty good and very close in terms of skin tones.
Another aspect of how we approached Geoff's comparison test, as an alternative to doing just a technical match on the grey scale in the chip chart, was to ask the question - how easy was it to dial the images in and get them looking good? ... that's again where you see a difference in the underlying color science and sensor characteristics of each of the cameras ... a skilled and experienced colorist like Aaron can (with a bit of help from the DP) work wonders on most digital footage but how long it takes him to find the sweet spot varies a lot based on the camera in question. In Geoff's test, because he was able to control the lighting and set-up fairly well between each camera, Aaron was able to dial in the Alexa and the EPIC pretty quickly and easily whereas the other cameras took a little longer and required more tweaking.
I'd be interested to know how much relative time you spent in Photoshop finessing the Alexa versus the EPIC? ... did you try the other cameras? ... if you could combine all the cameras together, is there a way you could slow down the flash rate a smidgen or two?
Of course, looking at still images gives you only half the story of how well a movie camera performs ... how each one handles temporal resolution as well as spatial resolution is the acid test in our industry ... more on that in the follow up posting below.
Thanks,
Neil
I just pulled the mid greens and mid reds down ever so slightly on the red epic mx.
I spent maybe 1 minute or less, was just a slight tint on the red epic mx.
I didn't try the other cameras yet... not sure how relevant it is after being brought down to 256 colors :] maybe it is maybe not....