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Michael H. Stevens March 23rd, 2008 05:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris Aaron (Post 846898)
I just went on a shoot for promotional video. The director is a 35mm film purist who was doing the shoot for charity and had to use low end HD (my EX1 and another XL H1). When he asked which should be used for A camera and which should be used for B I said use the XL H1 since it had a wide angle lens...but by the end of the night I feel like my camera had turned into the A camera along the way...thanks to the film curve pp...the closeups on the EX1 were just more impressive...yayy film curve pp...thanks for posting this stuff dudes and dudettes...

:D

Great story. Can you be specific about what lighting you were under and what "film curve" you used?

Thanks

Michael H. Stevens March 23rd, 2008 05:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve Sykes (Post 846870)
Bill do you have another updated SUF file with your recent settings we could upload. Your previous black settings went down to -8 do all your PPs black levels now go up by 4?

Also I am videoing a wedding on Monday. The church is quite dimly lit, but the aisle shot is likely to be backlit from the main windows at the front of church. I would like to have more detail in the blacks so can brighten them if necessary in post.

I will probably need to use several picture profiles in the church.

1) Aisle bright backlit shot in dim church
2) Stage shot, under a mixture of white stage spots (unfortunately not evenly dispersed lighting)
3) Signing of the register - dimly lit.

Is cine4 better in bringing up more contrasts in the blacks or would std1 with a modified PP be better.

I would like some practical answers please!

Thanks

If your church is dark in the foreground you will likely not need to drop the Black master, but do check with you histogram to make sure it bottoms out. To get more details in the blacks put the Black Gamma into positive territory but go easy because you will get more noise especially if you are using Gain. IMHO if you have your gain at anything over 0 then do not go for the black detail without experimenting first. If you expose right you will be able to bring it up in post, so make sure you do not underexpose. Use CINE4 to maximise your brightness in the dark areas.

Mike

Steve Sykes March 24th, 2008 02:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael H. Stevens (Post 847264)
If your church is dark in the foreground you will likely not need to drop the Black master, but do check with you histogram to make sure it bottoms out. To get more details in the blacks put the Black Gamma into positive territory but go easy because you will get more noise especially if you are using Gain. IMHO if you have your gain at anything over 0 then do not go for the black detail without experimenting first. If you expose right you will be able to bring it up in post, so make sure you do not underexpose. Use CINE4 to maximise your brightness in the dark areas.

Mike

Thanks Mike. I'll give that a try. I'll let you know how it went soon.

Steve

Bruno Demeocq March 24th, 2008 05:12 AM

Help
 
HI, I did try somes PP here, especially the one from Bill R. But unfortunaly I am a litte confuse with all the settings in the PP (lack of technical image background, I was writing (in french) for press before.
Next week, i'll leave Dakar, Sénégal for a 10 days shooting in Guinea and I GOt my a EX1 since one week oming after my Sony HVR-A1E and my Canon XL1.
What could be good PP choices for highlight sunydays and higlights cloudy days and black actors ?
(I am doing films and reports in Africa (mostly west since 10 years).

Eric Pascarelli March 24th, 2008 09:57 AM

I think Bill's settings but with CINE 4 gamma should be good. CINE 4 opens up the shadows more than the other gammas.

Bruno Demeocq March 24th, 2008 10:41 AM

Bruce
 
I dot not find Bruce PP here. Where are they in this thread ? ? ?
Thanks !

Bruno

Eric Pascarelli March 24th, 2008 10:43 AM

Bruno - I corrected my post - I meant Bill, not Bruce.

Bruno Demeocq March 24th, 2008 11:13 AM

Bruce = BILL
 
OK Bruce = Bill OKAY. Thanks.

Michael H. Stevens March 24th, 2008 02:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eric Pascarelli (Post 847564)
I think Bill's settings but with CINE 4 gamma should be good. CINE 4 opens up the shadows more than the other gammas.

......... but if you are in a hot bright sky as Africa is then CINE4 is "too bright" for the top. Use CINE1 and set the black point and black detail in the menu.

Chris Aaron March 24th, 2008 09:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael H. Stevens (Post 847261)
Great story. Can you be specific about what lighting you were under and what "film curve" you used?

Thanks

Used the "film curve" pp from the excel spreadsheet first couple o threads...we shot at night, outside, with five HMIs at various watts...

Eric Pascarelli March 24th, 2008 10:05 PM

From my tests, the rolloff at the top is more or less the same for all the Cine gammas - it's mostly the shadows that are affected.

But the best thing to do us to test it yourself.

Anmol Mishra March 29th, 2008 07:01 PM

Just the thread I was looking for
 
All said in the title.

Noah Yuan-Vogel March 30th, 2008 03:41 PM

anyone studied what the gamma number is? I had a chance to play around with picture profile settings for a few min on an EX1 in B&H the other day, and the gamma number didnt seem to do what i would have expected. i often found that boosting gamma would actually cause weird problems in highlights. while in one of the CINE gamma modes, i boosted the gamma thinking it would lighten the image, but instead it had a really weird effect on the white level. at higher gamma numbers, the white level would decrease so that clipped, pure white was actually more of a light grey... it also certainly struck me that it takes a bit of tweaking to actually use your the full IRE range. but the area spot meter on the EX1 is an awesome feature for tweaking this. anyway, id definitely like to see someone do a study on the exact effect of each setting on the overall light response curve. or i would love to get my hands on a camera and do it myself... till then, im sure using it for 8bit log images is probably out without significant testing. would also like to look further into how to optimize the image for nice looking highlight rolloff. cine modes are nice, but i feel there is more that can be done to truly make the highlights look organic. i did love using the camera in the few minutes i did, i like the look of boosted black gamma with a nice cine curve and sharpening off. awesome low noise, and really nice lens for sure.

Randy Strome March 30th, 2008 04:48 PM

I posted this elsewhere, but Gamma is actually better thought of as white level...BUT postive Gamma lowers the white level, so a negative # will move you further towards clipping, not away from it. I will post some pictures later.

Don Deignan March 31st, 2008 08:46 AM

The color RED
 
Thanks Bill for your picture profile. I am still getting a orange cast to my reds, especially on my cam monitor. It is not as bad on a Sony LCD but still there. Anyone have a profile for doing plays with all the spot lights and stage lights?

Don Deignan

Steven Thomas March 31st, 2008 10:00 AM

Yes,
I'm actually interested into what will be the best "general" PP setup and overall ideal camera settings for shooting concert footage under stage lighting.

When running manual, I know it can be a pain to dial in for a certain scene, and seconds later have your image blown out due to lighting changes.

Under these dynamic lighting conditions, would it be smart to use the auto iris? I'm not a fan of this, but it may help. The only issue with this is the unnatural exposure change due to the iris response slowly ramping the exposure. This really spells out cheap video.

How would you concert shooters deal with this issue?

Jac Chesson March 31st, 2008 11:55 AM

Hi Steven,

You might try to develop a conversation with the lighting director of the show and tell him what you're trying to achieve. He would be the one person able to help you over anyone else.

He might be able to lessen the extreme highs and lows of a concert situation without wrecking the end result. It doesn't hurt to ask.

If he says, "Take a hike!", then I would recommend a subtle riding of the manual iris.

Jac

Steven Thomas March 31st, 2008 12:19 PM

Thanks Jac.

That is what I usually do, but when there are instant changes, it's hard to not blow some of the exposures.

Lonnie Bell April 3rd, 2008 06:22 AM

Simon,
you mention Cine's are intended for "film-out"... but I would like to ask you to clarify this, because times are changing...

"Film out" use to mean recording digitally, but hoping to print to film for large venue (theater) viewing - a blow up - ahh, the holy grail of indy film guys...

But now with digital projectors in theaters and a traditional "film out" not required anymore - could these cine modes, which are made for "film outs", also actually mean in this era to be destined for digital projection to a theater screen or does it still mean destined to be printed to film or is there a difference?

Thanks,
Lonnie

Michael H. Stevens April 4th, 2008 02:21 PM

No, Cines are what you should use depending on condition and what effect you want. Nothing particularly related to film.

Brendan Pyatt April 6th, 2008 12:10 PM

PP for outdoors use - watersports
 
Hi,

Ive hada good read through this thread but alot of it find to follow.

I am looking for some PP for shooting outdoor watersports - I guess one for bright sunny conditions and one for cloudy overcast conditions.

- I use a grey card to set white balance.

thanks for any help.

Robert Young April 20th, 2008 08:24 PM

Brendan
See the previous posts in this thread (Post #119, #120, and going backward). I am using the Bill Ravens set up with Steven Thomas' modifications and am very pleased.
For bright outdoor shots, the Cine 1 setup is absolutely brilliant. I'm finding that I need to increase exposure anywhere from 1-3 f stops from the camera (Auto Iris) reading to get the best exposure. This will vary with the lighting and needs to be done more with reference to the histogram rather than the "look" on the LCD. This setting has huge latitude and invariably if I shoot what looks good on the LCD, the clip ends up looking rather underexposed on the editing monitor.
For overcast/indoor, the Cine 3 setup is good. I seem to need to increase the exposure around 1/2 of what is needed for the Cine 1 setup.
For overcast/indoor, the Cine 4 also works well and it seems like the camera exposure reading (Auto Iris) is pretty close to right on. It's the only one that I would venture to use in auto mode.
Many thanks to Bill and Steve. It would have taken me forever to reinvent this particular wheel.

Michael Maier April 23rd, 2008 03:38 AM

Has anybody develop a PP for low lighting and for high contrast situations yet?

Henry Olko April 24th, 2008 04:33 PM

Hi, can anyone share a pictur profilefor a Bleached Bypass look? Im going for the various CSI looks to- CSI Vegas / CSI NY (bleach bypass) etc.. Thanks!

Mathieu Ghekiere April 24th, 2008 07:03 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Hi, I've received the camera yesterday and I went some playing.
I haven't done this before, so I don't know if my settings will benefit anyone, but anyhow, they are in the excell file, attatched in this post.

Some explanation:
first you see Philip Bloom, that is his first one I took, changed it a verrrry little bit (almost nothing I think) and saved it as Philip Bloom.
Second one, Mathieu Ghekiere, is one I made myself, just by twibling the knobs, going for a pretty nice in-camera look.
Third one, 'Technicolor', isn't really that, it's just a copy of my own look, with some extra saturation, a bit over the top.

Don't know if this will benefit someone, but anyhow, here they are!
Best regards,

Michael Maier May 1st, 2008 03:06 PM

The EX1 community is being pretty slow in the developments of looks for the EX1. I remember the HD100 community quickly developed many looks like bleach bypass, color reverse etc.

Piotr Wozniacki May 2nd, 2008 01:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael Maier (Post 870619)
The EX1 community is being pretty slow in the developments of looks for the EX1. I remember the HD100 community quickly developed many looks like bleach bypass, color reverse etc.

Good point, Michael. For a couple of months last year, I used to be a Canon XH-A1 user, and the Canon XH (as well as the H1) communities also were very creative, compared to the EX1 users (us :))

I guess there is a reason to it, though. When I remember how intuitive playing with colour matrices was compared to those of the EX1, I guess it really takes a pro measuring equipment to tweak the pro EX1 in order to achieve some usable results. The same applies to the way Sony implemented everything "cine-" (gammas, matrix etc) - in my opinion, the philosophy behind it is much less obvious that in the case of the Canon, or even Sony V1.

Greg Voevodsky May 3rd, 2008 09:58 PM

EXTREME SETTINGS - RECOMMENDATIONS

I shoot bright beaches - white sand, white surf/foam, white clouds during the day and then SURF Sunsets - bright backlight, bright pink clouds, dark foreground - rocks, lighthouses, etc. I do use polas and ND grads.

Default settings were way to contrasty... I've tried some extreme settings but I think I have over done it - as things look a bit too flat and loosing detail - oops.

What would you recommend for these 3 SETTINGS? - NO CINE SETTINGS - PLEASE - IM LOOKING FOR BLACK AND WHITE LEVEL SETTINGS, KNEE, GAMMA, ETC.

1 - REDUCE BRIGHT HIGHLIGHTS ONLY - (MAXIMUM SETTINGS)

2. REDUCE HIGHLIGHTS (ABOVE) + BOOST BLACKS (FOR MAX CONTRAST CAPTURED) - MEDIUM AND MAX SETTING FOR SUNSETS.

I want to capture all the data possible like RED does in RAW, and then dial in the look in Apple's Color.

I do not mind a bit of a flat image as long as all the data is there to play with. Thanks!

Randy Strome May 4th, 2008 09:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greg Voevodsky (Post 871743)
EXTREME SETTINGS - RECOMMENDATIONS

I shoot bright beaches - white sand, white surf/foam, white clouds during the day and then SURF Sunsets - bright backlight, bright pink clouds, dark foreground - rocks, lighthouses, etc. I do use polas and ND grads.

Default settings were way to contrasty... I've tried some extreme settings but I think I have over done it - as things look a bit too flat and loosing detail - oops.

What would you recommend for these 3 SETTINGS? - NO CINE SETTINGS - PLEASE - IM LOOKING FOR BLACK AND WHITE LEVEL SETTINGS, KNEE, GAMMA, ETC.

1 - REDUCE BRIGHT HIGHLIGHTS ONLY - (MAXIMUM SETTINGS)

2. REDUCE HIGHLIGHTS (ABOVE) + BOOST BLACKS (FOR MAX CONTRAST CAPTURED) - MEDIUM AND MAX SETTING FOR SUNSETS.

I want to capture all the data possible like RED does in RAW, and then dial in the look in Apple's Color.

I do not mind a bit of a flat image as long as all the data is there to play with. Thanks!


Hi Greg,

Not sure if you meant that you meant that you wanted to avoid Cine Settings all together or if you wanted to focus on the other settings. Here is a sequence that I did a few days ago with Cine 1. It is straight out of the camera footage with no work in post other than adding transitions and a title (no time this week). After playing around with settings forever, I use this as my safety setting all the time for beach stuff. Only adjustments to the stock Cine 1 is Black at -4 and Bill's color settings (not sure if they are the latest, but I like them).

http://www.vimeo.com/965602

Greg Voevodsky May 4th, 2008 01:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Randy Strome (Post 871876)
Hi Greg,

Not sure if you meant that you meant that you wanted to avoid Cine Settings all together or if you wanted to focus on the other settings. Here is a sequence that I did a few days ago with Cine 1. It is straight out of the camera footage with no work in post other than adding transitions and a title (no time this week). After playing around with settings forever, I use this as my safety setting all the time for beach stuff. Only adjustments to the stock Cine 1 is Black at -4 and Bill's color settings (not sure if they are the latest, but I like them).

http://www.vimeo.com/965602

THANKS RANDY,

Actually, I want to avoid the Cine settings - since they are limiting dynamic range a bit more than I like. Also, my footage is meant to be more of a Discovery Channel sharp reality look.

Anyone else? Bright beach, white sand, surf and SUNSETS with detail in the shadows and highlights.

Randy Strome May 4th, 2008 04:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greg Voevodsky (Post 871945)
THANKS RANDY,

Actually, I want to avoid the Cine settings - since they are limiting dynamic range a bit more than I like. Also, my footage is meant to be more of a Discovery Channel sharp reality look.

Anyone else? Bright beach, white sand, surf and SUNSETS with detail in the shadows and highlights.

Got it. I am wondering though if you will not end up having to tone back one of the STD settings to essntially be Cine type settings to do what you want. Even Cine 3 and 4 prove to be too contrasty for most of the beach stuff we shoot. We find that with either of those that we are often losing one end or the other. Now if you are shooting basicly video stills (limited pans, plenty of time to set up each shot) then I could see one of those working, but IMO the STD's are pretty unusable for this type of shooting. Interested to hear what others think though.

Mike Stevens May 4th, 2008 06:53 PM

I find in the bright harsh environment of the Californian desert I can only use Cine4 early morning and for the golden hour. I think what you do is to start with Cine1 and tweak it.

Now somewhere I think remember Bill Raven saying that to get most information use Std4 but then you will need a lot of post to stop it looking like generic video.

Mike

Sami Sanpakkila May 5th, 2008 11:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Randy Strome (Post 872001)
Got it. I am wondering though if you will not end up having to tone back one of the STD settings to essntially be Cine type settings to do what you want. Even Cine 3 and 4 prove to be too contrasty for most of the beach stuff we shoot. We find that with either of those that we are often losing one end or the other. Now if you are shooting basicly video stills (limited pans, plenty of time to set up each shot) then I could see one of those working, but IMO the STD's are pretty unusable for this type of shooting. Interested to hear what others think though.

Im in no means a professional when it comes to PP but Ive been shooting with Bill R's PP. Yesterday I tweaked it by taking away all the color corrections and using Cine2 with Gamma level at +5 and Black at -13. These settings work great on a sunny day and during the golden hour for me.

I like to shoot mostly with 5600 WB or 3200 WB indoors and get that tone change from the "incorrect" WB. I think that tweaking the colors in the menu messes things up if not shooting with the "correct" WB. Is this a viable thought/find at all?

Randy Strome May 5th, 2008 11:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sami Sanpakkila (Post 872393)
Im in no means a professional when it comes to PP but Ive been shooting with Bill R's PP. Yesterday I tweaked it by taking away all the color corrections and using Cine2 with Gamma level at +5 and Black at -13. These settings work great on a sunny day and during the golden hour for me.

I like to shoot mostly with 5600 WB or 3200 WB indoors and get that tone change from the "incorrect" WB. I think that tweaking the colors in the menu messes things up if not shooting with the "correct" WB. Is this a viable thought/find at all?

Hi Sami,

It's right if its working. Results is what we are all after.

Just to clarify, are you saying that you were using default settings on Cine 2 except for gamma and black?

Could you post a still from the video? Thanks!

Sami Sanpakkila May 5th, 2008 01:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Randy Strome (Post 872400)
Hi Sami,
It's right if its working. Results is what we are all after.
Just to clarify, are you saying that you were using default settings on Cine 2 except for gamma and black?
Could you post a still from the video? Thanks!

Here's my settings. I started with Philip Blooms settings that were the same (or based on) Bill R's PP I think. This is much more different profile from those than i even realised now that I look at the settings side by side. Its made to be as much like shooting film (the way I want) that I've been able to achieve so far. Ill post some stills on wednesday when I'm back home. For shooting in low light I have different settings but nothing I really like yet.

Matrix ...............on
Select................cinema
Level..................0
Phase.................0
R-G...................0
R-B...................0
G-R...................0
G-B...................0
B-R...................0
B-G...................0

Color Correction..............off

White.............................off

Detail.............................on
Detail Level.....................0
Detail Freq......................0
(and all other settings at)..0

Skin Tone Detail...............off

Knee..............................(greyed out)

Gamma Level..............+5
Select.............CINE2

Black..........................-13

Black Gamma..............0

low key sat...............0

Greg Voevodsky May 5th, 2008 09:11 PM

OK - I'm happy with my highlight settings... having set them live with a cloud at sunset.

knee 98
slope +90
Sat 25

I have my zebras at 106, and now I get good details in my clouds, no zebras and no blow outs both in auto and manual. A big difference from full auto that blows out the clouds.

Now, back to setting blacks and stretch.. please NO NO NO CINE... I want manual controls over:

BLACK: ??
BLACK GAMMA: ??

So, right now I have a medium setting of

Black +20
Black Gamma -20

This seems to boost the blacks, and still give me a black left over in super high contrast settings. In normal settings, the blacks are now greys.

Any ADVICE ON STRETCHING BLACKS 1 AND 2 STOPS for Sunsets would be greatly appreciated. I've fixed the highlights... what about the blacks. Thanks.

Sami Sanpakkila May 7th, 2008 02:11 AM

8 Attachment(s)
Referring to my previous posts (#275 and 277).

Here are some stills taken with the PP I use now. Shot with Letus Extreme, Canon FD 20mm f2.8, 100mm f2.8 and 135mm f2.

First image shows a shot with a PP that I got from Philip Blooms blog. The pics after that are with the PP I described in post #277 which suits my Canon lenses and my liking a bit better. As you see there's not a whole lot of difference, in the first pic the sky is a bit more magenta and the green is a bit oversaturated I think.

Opinions are welcomed! Thanks!

PS. Oh yes, and all is shot with 5600K!

Alexander Kubalsky May 7th, 2008 11:05 AM

those are some beautiful pictures Sami. Thanks for posting them. I also have the Bill Raven PP and Ill try your tweaked setting. Theres alot more humidity where I am, I wonder if it makes a difference.

Mike Stevens May 7th, 2008 04:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greg Voevodsky (Post 872676)

please NO NO NO CINE... I want manual controls over:

BLACK: ??
BLACK GAMMA: ??


I don't think you understand what the CINEs are; they are not presets. With them you have full manual control of Master Black and Black Gamma and everything else except the knee because that's what the CINEs are designed to do best. Each CINE rolls of the whites in a different way and I don't think you can emulate them easily with the STDs.

That's why most here choose the CINE and then tweak it.

Greg Voevodsky May 7th, 2008 11:37 PM

I found the Cine setting to be much noiser like Cine 3 in low light conditions vs standard. Here's another question then in terms of lattitude.

Again low light, sunset with details in the shadows - minimum noise.

Is it better to wash out the image like BLACK +20, BLACK CINE -20 and then add the details back in the blacks... OR...

is it better to shoot BLACK -5, BLACK CINE +30 which gives nice blacks and still brightens the dark greys?

Am I getting more latitude with the 2nd (BLACK -5, BLACK CINE +30) setting than the 1st when it is corrected back down?

(I guess RED's washed out RAW look and then post production has me thinking more about shooting a bit flatter to get more detail - am I wrong here? I know this is not RAW... the above settings are a decent test - I will test them soon in Color.)


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