Mark Toia
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In your opinion Mark, has knowledge of RAW workflows (grading in particular) been improving at all over time? I feel like it's been a continual frustration for many of us that people don't understand how or why they should be working with RAW files in the grade if possible.
Hi Brad...
The simple fact is this, grading directly from the R3D's will give your the best results. thats fact. That means you have full Kelvin, tint, contrast, gamma control...
If you convert to DPX , Tiif or PRO RES or DNXHD using the same colour settings you shot with on set... then you have effectively created a colour baked image... this is now your new base. You have technically thrown away the full range of the original R3D and have left RED land.
You don't need to work in RAW if you dont want too.. it does give you the best flexibility, but please don't think you have to. I quite often work in PRORES myself... (if Im stuck with a job I need to turn out quickly) But I never use the colour settings I shot with. What I do is I create PRORES files (or DNXHD files) that have been re-white balanced to perfect white and exposure and then export everything out as REDLOGFILM.
Doing it this way I at least I don't get stuck with a contrast I cannot get information from and odd colours that I struggle to grade out.
This is what people should be doing with there DPX, TIFF workflows as well.... and Im sure a lot of people do.
But my preference is RAW grading as its quicker... faster... easier. (for me) but once again, there is know need to stay in RAW or grade from RAW if you dont want too... just make sure you end up with a properly balanced 'one-light' in a decent container (tif, dpx, exr...) like paulherrin & Björn Benckert spoke of.
Hope this helps.