Jason Han
Well-known member
https://vimeo.com/169046976
Shot on RED Scarlet-W + Cooke S4i panchros - 5K WS 4:1 / 9:1 for 60p - Edited/Graded on Davinci 12
Hey guys, just wanted to share some of my footage along with my insights/experience with the new camera. I've compiled some clips from a commercial I shot recently. I pushed this camera really hard, I was very curious about it's DR limits and ISO/noise ratios. The image is outstanding! The dynamic range is actually above 16, you can see from the first shot which is barely lit with the windows blown over 7-8 stops but still retaining information. There's still more detail that I could have extracted. ISO went up to 1600 in grand central, and it came out relatively clean.
One thing I learned about HDMI outputs: if you use the side pogo as your LCD, and you try to output HDMI, your LCD will go black. The side pogo and HDMI outputs through the same ports, so if you use HDMI for whatever reasons (extra monitor etc), you'd have to use your LCD through the top pogo output. No issues with SDI output with either ports.
Comparing to Epic Dragon: the biggest thing that sold me was the auto calibration of the sensor. My sensor stayed stable throughout temp/exposure changes with just the auto calib, saving over an hour of shooting time. Cooling system improved drastically, which makes the S-W a lot more quieter as well. Less noise on the S-W footage even at higher ISO. I plan on doing a side by side Epic Dragon VS S-W test when I get some free time, but the image seemed relatively similar. Body is so light and compact, it's really well designed. Loving the new Base I/O V-lock pack.
Grain is nice looking, but sometimes, especially when you work with log, you will see a lot more of the chroma noise. I found that the best way to reduce noise with S-W while retaining the most detail is to add subtle NR to specific chroma channels. I love neat video for heavy noise, but I hate what it does to the footage, even when turned down/sharpened, always gets a little muddy. I found that S-W has the most noise in the blue channel (60-70% all noise), then red channel (20-30% all noise), and then green channel, which is the least noisiest most of the time. You can check this by using the splitter combiner node on Davinci. If I needed a subtle NR, I used spatial NR to the blue and red channels, mostly to the blue and it worked well.
http://i.imgur.com/esX3mQC.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/fkbqUE8.jpg
Overall loving the camera very much, I can't wait to shoot some of my next projects!
Shot on RED Scarlet-W + Cooke S4i panchros - 5K WS 4:1 / 9:1 for 60p - Edited/Graded on Davinci 12
Hey guys, just wanted to share some of my footage along with my insights/experience with the new camera. I've compiled some clips from a commercial I shot recently. I pushed this camera really hard, I was very curious about it's DR limits and ISO/noise ratios. The image is outstanding! The dynamic range is actually above 16, you can see from the first shot which is barely lit with the windows blown over 7-8 stops but still retaining information. There's still more detail that I could have extracted. ISO went up to 1600 in grand central, and it came out relatively clean.
One thing I learned about HDMI outputs: if you use the side pogo as your LCD, and you try to output HDMI, your LCD will go black. The side pogo and HDMI outputs through the same ports, so if you use HDMI for whatever reasons (extra monitor etc), you'd have to use your LCD through the top pogo output. No issues with SDI output with either ports.
Comparing to Epic Dragon: the biggest thing that sold me was the auto calibration of the sensor. My sensor stayed stable throughout temp/exposure changes with just the auto calib, saving over an hour of shooting time. Cooling system improved drastically, which makes the S-W a lot more quieter as well. Less noise on the S-W footage even at higher ISO. I plan on doing a side by side Epic Dragon VS S-W test when I get some free time, but the image seemed relatively similar. Body is so light and compact, it's really well designed. Loving the new Base I/O V-lock pack.
Grain is nice looking, but sometimes, especially when you work with log, you will see a lot more of the chroma noise. I found that the best way to reduce noise with S-W while retaining the most detail is to add subtle NR to specific chroma channels. I love neat video for heavy noise, but I hate what it does to the footage, even when turned down/sharpened, always gets a little muddy. I found that S-W has the most noise in the blue channel (60-70% all noise), then red channel (20-30% all noise), and then green channel, which is the least noisiest most of the time. You can check this by using the splitter combiner node on Davinci. If I needed a subtle NR, I used spatial NR to the blue and red channels, mostly to the blue and it worked well.
http://i.imgur.com/esX3mQC.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/fkbqUE8.jpg
Overall loving the camera very much, I can't wait to shoot some of my next projects!