Jason DeSimone
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 27, 2011
- Messages
- 163
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Age
- 46
- Location
- Los Angeles, CA
- Website
- www.rwpnyc.com
preach on!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
But I don't want my output scaled to fit 0.0 -> 1.0.
RED footage shot at ISO 800 produces values considerably higher than 1.0 from the half float linear path in the SDK. See here for an example. And I want those values preserved so I can deal with the over-brights as a creative decision further down the pipeline, not automatically scaled to a 0.0 -> 1.0 range.
I think you are promoting a modern linear working method. That's were we should be going.
Gavin might be suggesting that we have legacy systems that we need to work with. And until those systems change, we can make them 'safer' to work with by mapping 0-1 until they get with the RAW/LinEXR program.
With Gavin's proposed method, the scale and offset necessary to fit to the 0 -> 1 range would vary depending on the image, so it would be necessary to pass that information on a per clip basis through the post chain.
Sorry... I don't buy that. There weren't any other companies that were saying that they were releasing a 4K camera in 2006 when we announced. We were alone at the time.
I don't think you can name one company, let alone 10.
Jim
Wasn't it Robert Altman who said:
"the cheapest part of making a film is the film"
David
None of those were for sale in 2006, the Olympus quad-HD camera is still just a prototype after five years as far as I know. The Dalsa Origin was the only production-ready (by which I mean people were shooting small projects on it) 4K camera that predated the Red One but it wasn't for sale nor in large production. I don't know when the Phantom 65 came out but I think it was a year later than the Red One.
Wasn't it Robert Altman who said:
"the cheapest part of making a film, is the film"
David