Dan Hudgins
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Think Crome not Neg
Think Crome not Neg
The monotor should LOOK darker when you stop down 1/2 to a max of 2 stops. You then need to ADD light to the dark areas to light the image back up, if you use the gamma or curvers to boost the lower tones, from 18% gray to "black" you will just see more noise that is always there but too dark to matter much. If you make the monitor lighter, then you get a false reading on the noise in the shadows because on a larger monitor AFTER recording compression the noise will look worse with the digital push. Better maybe to keep the ISO and monitor even, and stop down and use fill light back up to get the image on the monitor looking good ON THE SET, "in the camera" not in post.
I have this problem all the time working with by brother, he wants to "fix it in the lab" or in the case with the RED ONE (tm) fix it with the Color Correction or download-transform utilities. You cannot make bad lighting on film look like it should later, nor can you with digital, they both have noise and grain in the shadow areas. You can make the gray card lighter, just like you could when you push process film, but the result ALWAYS looks worse than just having enough light on the set, or fill outdoors.
If you look a the daylight parts of "The Train (1964)" and Planet of the Apes (1968 film)" you will see them using Arc lamps or 10Ks in daylight to fill the shadows. Reflectors look bad sometimes, but we have found that flat white Styrofoam sheets about 3/8" thick and about 2x3 foot held at or slightly above head level give a soft fill that works well without the glare that some of the glossy or metal film covered reflectors can give.
The older negative films had a more limited contrast range more like 'Crome reversal films, the RED ONE (tm) sensor has a contrast range and break through highlights like reversal film, more forgiving of under exposure then over exposure. But with the disadvantage of the RED CODE (tm) blocking more in the shadows since the size of the binary steps gets BIGGER in the shadow parts relative to how the eye sees things, if you give the image a log curve you are compressing the highlights and expanding the shadows, so the sensor records linear at 12 bit rather than log at 8 bit, you then need to crush the highlights to get the tones to look more like film, otherwise it looks like a sharp camcorder with little shadow detail and blasted highlights.
It would be nice if the sensor had less noise and the camera recorded RAW sensor data, but that is not the case, so there is some loss in recording just like any video recorder using compressed format.
Many fine movies have been made on film that looks intrinsically worse on a test chart than the RED ONE (tm), and having 14 stops rather than 11 stops will not make up for bad lighting on the set and not having it look good on the viewfinder. I keep telling my brother, "it needs to look good IN the viewfinder since it only get worse further on." Yes you can filter and things, but a clean good image will look better, for the most part Color Correction spreads the image tones by raising contrast in some part of the image curves, and so can only REDUCE the amount of actual image data in the end result frames.
See this example image from The Garden of Allah (1936),
http://www.widescreenmuseum.com/oldcolor/technicolor10.htm
As an example of how good an image you can get with a camera with limited tonal range by carefully controlling the light and not pushing the film too much. Later they pushed the film more, and it never looked as good, better to fry the actors then overrate the ISO for quality results.
Color negative Film has about 2 stops advantage over the RED ONE (tm) in the highlights before it gets too off to save, so that is why I think from the test images EI 1280 (320 -2 stops) is the "Bottom" exposure for 18% gray, you cannot light much more than that up in the dark areas unless you also light up the mid-tones, you would need to add +2 stops of light in the shadow and +1 stops of light near midtone). Because of the way the sensor is sensitive in "powers of two" bringing up the shadows two or even three stops will only bring the highlights up less than 1/4 stop. It will not look that way on the set, it will look like the shadows are way over light, but that is where a linear (not log) display mode on the monitor could help, if the monitor shows all 12 sensor bits as linear, then you can see that the shadow areas look dark to the sensor even when they look bright to your eye.
The RED ONE (tm) is the first Digital Cinema camera that will make a real impact on how movies are shot worldwide, it is changing motion picture production forever. It was possable because sensors are just becoming good enough to use for Digital Cinema in place of film. In the future we should expect better sensors, but no sensor can make up for a lack of art direction, it can help, but is not a replacement if you are going to show images and not just use the image as a template for computer generated "images".
I wonder if there will be a need for cameras in the future since more and more of the frame is being used for computer generated images, i.e. not getting it "right in the camera" with lights and filters like so many great films of the "past"...
Think Crome not Neg
Well, it would be easier to forget about all this, shot 320ISO and underexpose 1 or 2 stops. But then the image in the LCD would appear too dark. I think that´s the reason for all this. XD
The monotor should LOOK darker when you stop down 1/2 to a max of 2 stops. You then need to ADD light to the dark areas to light the image back up, if you use the gamma or curvers to boost the lower tones, from 18% gray to "black" you will just see more noise that is always there but too dark to matter much. If you make the monitor lighter, then you get a false reading on the noise in the shadows because on a larger monitor AFTER recording compression the noise will look worse with the digital push. Better maybe to keep the ISO and monitor even, and stop down and use fill light back up to get the image on the monitor looking good ON THE SET, "in the camera" not in post.
I have this problem all the time working with by brother, he wants to "fix it in the lab" or in the case with the RED ONE (tm) fix it with the Color Correction or download-transform utilities. You cannot make bad lighting on film look like it should later, nor can you with digital, they both have noise and grain in the shadow areas. You can make the gray card lighter, just like you could when you push process film, but the result ALWAYS looks worse than just having enough light on the set, or fill outdoors.
If you look a the daylight parts of "The Train (1964)" and Planet of the Apes (1968 film)" you will see them using Arc lamps or 10Ks in daylight to fill the shadows. Reflectors look bad sometimes, but we have found that flat white Styrofoam sheets about 3/8" thick and about 2x3 foot held at or slightly above head level give a soft fill that works well without the glare that some of the glossy or metal film covered reflectors can give.
The older negative films had a more limited contrast range more like 'Crome reversal films, the RED ONE (tm) sensor has a contrast range and break through highlights like reversal film, more forgiving of under exposure then over exposure. But with the disadvantage of the RED CODE (tm) blocking more in the shadows since the size of the binary steps gets BIGGER in the shadow parts relative to how the eye sees things, if you give the image a log curve you are compressing the highlights and expanding the shadows, so the sensor records linear at 12 bit rather than log at 8 bit, you then need to crush the highlights to get the tones to look more like film, otherwise it looks like a sharp camcorder with little shadow detail and blasted highlights.
It would be nice if the sensor had less noise and the camera recorded RAW sensor data, but that is not the case, so there is some loss in recording just like any video recorder using compressed format.
Many fine movies have been made on film that looks intrinsically worse on a test chart than the RED ONE (tm), and having 14 stops rather than 11 stops will not make up for bad lighting on the set and not having it look good on the viewfinder. I keep telling my brother, "it needs to look good IN the viewfinder since it only get worse further on." Yes you can filter and things, but a clean good image will look better, for the most part Color Correction spreads the image tones by raising contrast in some part of the image curves, and so can only REDUCE the amount of actual image data in the end result frames.
See this example image from The Garden of Allah (1936),
http://www.widescreenmuseum.com/oldcolor/technicolor10.htm
As an example of how good an image you can get with a camera with limited tonal range by carefully controlling the light and not pushing the film too much. Later they pushed the film more, and it never looked as good, better to fry the actors then overrate the ISO for quality results.
Color negative Film has about 2 stops advantage over the RED ONE (tm) in the highlights before it gets too off to save, so that is why I think from the test images EI 1280 (320 -2 stops) is the "Bottom" exposure for 18% gray, you cannot light much more than that up in the dark areas unless you also light up the mid-tones, you would need to add +2 stops of light in the shadow and +1 stops of light near midtone). Because of the way the sensor is sensitive in "powers of two" bringing up the shadows two or even three stops will only bring the highlights up less than 1/4 stop. It will not look that way on the set, it will look like the shadows are way over light, but that is where a linear (not log) display mode on the monitor could help, if the monitor shows all 12 sensor bits as linear, then you can see that the shadow areas look dark to the sensor even when they look bright to your eye.
The RED ONE (tm) is the first Digital Cinema camera that will make a real impact on how movies are shot worldwide, it is changing motion picture production forever. It was possable because sensors are just becoming good enough to use for Digital Cinema in place of film. In the future we should expect better sensors, but no sensor can make up for a lack of art direction, it can help, but is not a replacement if you are going to show images and not just use the image as a template for computer generated "images".
I wonder if there will be a need for cameras in the future since more and more of the frame is being used for computer generated images, i.e. not getting it "right in the camera" with lights and filters like so many great films of the "past"...