Barry_Green
Moderator
With all due respect -- I don't think you can. The difference between the 79 and 109 IRE cutoffs does not explain the purple/green in the lower 9 stops of the gamma curve, where both CLOG and VLOG-L encode fundamentally identically.With Canon C-Log, highlight saturation is at 109 IRE and with Panasonic V-Log-L, highlight saturation is at 79 IRE and we can all see what a difference that makes.
Absolutely regardless of Canon's marketing, the fundamental fact is that both CLOG and VLOG-L record 12 stops. They record the first 8 stops fundamentally identically. They record the last 4 stops differently, with the Canon using more codes. Do you disagree with any of this? I would be shocked if you do, but I do have to ask to see if we're at least on the same page to this point.
The brightest four stops have more gradation in CLOG than they do in VLOG-L, that is true. It is also where it matters the least; it only comes into play on items that are hotter than 90% white reflectance. I would further say that much of the purple/green we've been seeing demonstrated is not even happening in those upper stops; most certainly the stuff on the road is not above 90% white reflectance!
The problems in the GH4's purple/green stuff are not attributable to VLOG-L having fewer codes. This is largely definitively proven by the DVX200 rendering the fundamentally same scene, using VLOG-L, in the same 8-bit space, in the same codec, with the same 79-IRE cutoff, without any of the purple/green stuff happening. It is not anything to do with VLOG-L's gradation steps. It just isn't. You may not LIKE the idea that VLOG-L has fewer steps, but that disapproval does not convict it of this crime. The gradation steps in VLOG-L are sufficient to avoid this problem, as the DVX200 shows. Whatever the problem is, it isn't the VLOG-L code values or 79 IRE cutoff.
I don't have definitive answers for you as I don't even have a GH4 to experiment with. I can tell you some places that it's not coming from, and I can speculate where it is coming from.Where is this horrible macro blocking coming from? Is it the excellent Panasonic codec ruining the party?
The first place it is coming from is in the post-processing chain, as we've already seen proven with Premiere. Some programs are causing blocking that doesn't show up when other programs are used. Those who are encountering the issue should coordinate to definitively determine what post-processing software handles VLOG-L recordings poorly.
It is my contention that, as others have already said and shown, the purple/green is always there in all profiles, but it is there to a much lesser degree in the other profiles. It shows up on VLOG-L more because, I theorize, the color saturation on VLOG-L is so much lower to begin with, that it requires more exaggeration in post to return to proper saturation. When doing so, the purple/green get magnified as well, and what was once a hidden little issue becomes more to the forefront.
Can you turn down the color in a GH4 sufficiently in any other profile that it matches the color saturation of VLOG-L as recorded natively? If so, someone should try running that test to see if a desaturated regular profile exhibits comparable purple/green to what you're encountering with VLOG-L.
Secondly, I would invite someone to communicate with the beta testers who've been using VLOG-L on the GH4 for the better part of a year; it would seem like those with the most experience would have run into all these problems and already have worked out solutions to them.
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