View Full Version : Canon 100c Footage is Grainy


Daniel Ruiz Smith
February 4th, 2021, 11:30 PM
Hello, I have been having some issues with some footage filmed on a Canon c100 mark1 that I rented at 2 different occasions.

When I first Rented the Camera, I set up all the settings according to this video provided by Canon:

Setting up the EOS C100 for Shooting, Part 1 - YouTube



I filmed all the footage necessary, and it was wodnerful. I then returned to film additional footage with different interviewees and rented from the same company, and the same camera model, the Canon C100 Mark1. However, after setting up the camera, and filming my subjects (3 different interviews) I notived the video footage was extremely noisy. This was apparent from reviewing the footage directly from the media menu on the camera, as well as after I imported the footage onto my Mac.

THE SOLUTION I am seeking is if it is possible to save this footage even though it has already been filmed, and keep it from being extremely grainy and noisy. I no longer have the camera, because it was a rental, but I do have all this footage. Is it salvagable and HOW? I am going to provide a link to a 30 second sample video of my issue. On the right hand side, it is the good footage when I first interviewed. and on the left, is the grainy footage (Best to be viewed full screen to see what I'm talking about).



THINGS TO NOTE:

1- The video sample I am providing is in Adobe Premiere, and before someone says "You are viewing it at 1/2 playback rate" I want to inform you that the footage looks just this bad from the MAC finder, as well as from any other location I view the RAW footage.



2- This sample footage on the left is not the only subject I filmed, I have 3 other subjects in DIFFERENT locations that all have this grainy effect on the video footage.



3- There is no color editing at all on either of these videos, this is directly imported from the camera, and from Adobe's software.

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HERE IS THE SAMPLE FOOTAGE:



https://youtu.be/QGpM5b-8qV8

Seth Bloombaum
February 5th, 2021, 11:21 AM
What were your exposure settings, specifically your gain/iso setting? Too high a gain is the usual reason for grain or noise in an image. The usual solution is to adjust aperture and remove any ND filter, as all these controls affect exposure. You may need to add light while filming.

It is also true that your program and preview monitors in Premiere are set to half-resolution.

A Canon C100 is a pro camera with many setup options. It’s easy for less-experienced people to get bad results. I’d suggest learning about the 4 exposure controls and their secondary effects. Hint: The secondary effect of changes in gain is changes in noise/grain.