New_Zealand
Veteran
can you tell if the film was done in LUT or Color Grading? how much differences is there? Just warp up a short film and trying to decide, do I do LUT's? or do I hire a color grader to do the film?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
can you tell if the film was done in LUT or Color Grading?
can you tell if the film was done in LUT or Color Grading? how much differences is there? Just warp up a short film and trying to decide, do I do LUT's? or do I hire a color grader to do the film?
....
On the editing side, I found this clip very informative esp the explanation given by Daria Fissoun regarding the Color Management In DaVinci Resolve 17 , she literally wrote the book on this for Black Magic on their Colour Mgt. It was good on how it all works but was silent on what settings should be used for rendering to HDR, SDR etc. I've reuploaded my HDR sample as I had to "Limit output gamut to P3-DCI" given the capability of todays display devices. My settings are below FWIW and the HDR output is now the same as that used by the production houses creating UHD Blu Ray disks. Using Davinci Colour Mgt makes it easy to make one edit/grade on the "DaVinci Wide Gamet" in your timeline/monitor then you change the output color space when you want a SDR or HDR version and Resolve does the mapping between the colour spaces. Nice and straight forward.
View attachment 143315
when a colorist does the correction on the footage, what is the best way for the colorist to return the footage back to me so I can hand it off to the Visual Effects guy to add in his effects? I was given some different ideas to look at; export the individual clips in DNxHD for best quality(Loss less), or create individual custom luts that are easily apply them and add VFX
First thing I'd do is speak to my VFX guy and get his input. Surely he must have an opinion and/or preference.
Personally, I'd export the individual graded clips using the highest quality ProRes codec that the VFX guy recommends.