funkyou86 Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 Hey folks! I'm curious how would you grade these shots: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B6wqoFFMeKowaVRXY3NRWjdpcFU I pretty messed up the settings on the set. It was shot with GH4 (almost JM settings). The shots are underexposed, the skin tones are pretty bad, the lights were 5500K, noise is very much present. So, how would you bring life to these shots? Thanks for your time! a_reynolds 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cantsin Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 @funkyou86 - here's my shot. Graded/corrected your PNGs in Resolve. In the first shot, I also applied Neat Video's artifact removal filter. You will be able to get rid of the image noise if you apply Neat's temporal filter to the material. (Which I couldn't do with the PNG stills.) I also included the drx files so that you will be able to use these grades in Resolve (if you work with the program). 1_1.1.1_1.1.1.drx 3_1.3.1.drx 3_1.3.1_1.2.1.drx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funkyou86 Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 4 minutes ago, cantsin said: @funkyou86 - here's my shot. Graded/corrected your PNGs in Resolve. In the first shot, I also applied Neat Video's artifact removal filter. You will be able to get rid of the image noise if you apply Neat's temporal filter to the material. (Which I couldn't do with the PNG stills.) I also included the drx files so that you will be able to use these grades in Resolve (if you work with the program). 1_1.1.1_1.1.1.drx 3_1.3.1.drx 3_1.3.1_1.2.1.drx Thanks mate. I will give it a try. I downloaded resolve to grade with it, but unfortunately plenty of footages are "interpreted" in premiere (speed and aspect ratio) and I wasn't able to import the premieres XML, so I'm stuck with lumetri. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
no_connection Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 I don't really know what the video is about or what you want to say with the picture mood. Make the exposure work for the mood and add character. funkyou86 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funkyou86 Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 58 minutes ago, no_connection said: I don't really know what the video is about or what you want to say with the picture mood. Make the exposure work for the mood and add character. Looks solid. I'm trying to push some cold-blue colors (to the shadows) at the girls footage, and some warm colours to the band. Just raised exposure, contrast and saturation? Thanks for your help guys, I really appreciate it! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
no_connection Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 I involved a few more nodes than that. Some corrections done in linear space, some in log, some by lut to add some film simulation to give colors a push.. Same grading for all shots above. I'm just a hobbyist with an interest in a lot of things, a pro would probably put hand to forehead. *edit* I'm not saying simple is wrong ether, if all it takes is a slight adjustment, then that is the right one. funkyou86 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bunk Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 My go at it, but only after I read "I'm trying to push some cold-blue colors (to the shadows) at the girls footage, and some warm colours to the band." Top two have the same grade, lower one slightly different. funkyou86 and a_reynolds 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funkyou86 Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 Can someone tell me why is Premiere doing this sh*t to me? It is not the first time it's happening to me, the export is absolutely different than the source. Source: .h264, 200 mbit/s, .mov export: .h264, vbr 2pass 100mbit to 200mbit or MATCH source, or AVI uncompressed, or qucktime .mov matching source, it's always the same. What am I doing wrong, can somebody give me a hand please? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
no_connection Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 Looks like the right version is remapped to 16-235 range. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funkyou86 Posted July 19, 2016 Share Posted July 19, 2016 16 minutes ago, no_connection said: Looks like the right version is remapped to 16-235 range. The clips were recorded at 0-255 luminance level. So why is premiere changing these settings? Sorry for going offtopic, but this seriously pissing me off. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maxmizer Posted July 20, 2016 Share Posted July 20, 2016 VLC could be interpreted in the wrong way... try more ... (quicktime) funkyou86 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funkyou86 Posted July 20, 2016 Share Posted July 20, 2016 2 hours ago, maxmizer said: VLC could be interpreted in the wrong way... try more ... (quicktime) Yep, looks like VLC and quicktime is interpreting in a really wrong way. I compared the shots with different players, take a look please. Looks like windows and YT is reading the file properly. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
no_connection Posted July 20, 2016 Share Posted July 20, 2016 I think all of them are reading the file correctly, but the two top apps think they are sending the signal to a TV and adjusting the output to match. If they read the file as 16-255 it would ether be left alone or being clipped/expanded to 0-255. If you are using nVidia card, check settings and see if you can force output to be 0-255 range, it might be that and hardware acceleration that causes it. I use MPC-HC so I can't help you with quicktime or VLC. maxmizer and funkyou86 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funkyou86 Posted July 20, 2016 Share Posted July 20, 2016 23 minutes ago, no_connection said: I think all of them are reading the file correctly, but the two top apps think they are sending the signal to a TV and adjusting the output to match. If they read the file as 16-255 it would ether be left alone or being clipped/expanded to 0-255. If you are using nVidia card, check settings and see if you can force output to be 0-255 range, it might be that and hardware acceleration that causes it. I use MPC-HC so I can't help you with quicktime or VLC. Cheers mate! That was it, I changed the output at Nvidia's settings from limited to 0-255 and it works! kaylee 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PannySVHS Posted August 1, 2016 Share Posted August 1, 2016 On 6.7.2016 at 0:27 AM, a_reynolds said: Hello. I've been following this blog since last year and it was such a big help to decide which serious video camera to choose! so, thanks guys. I have a GH4 and today I got my first video freelance interview and that is something that my film school just isn't preparing me for. The job is to cover outdoors events, focusing on people. So I went out and grabbed some footage outdoors in direct sunlight. Now, how would you, experienced people, grade this? I've been reading a lot of books and experimenting but just seeing your colours would really help mainly because of the skin tones. https://www.dropbox.com/s/know5akvpklxzqv/P1010768_teste.mov?dl=0 GH4, internal 4k UHD and Natural profile. THIS! is a very hard shot to grade. The examples on this thread show great dedication and good results. But I would say, this is not going to show any color magic. Shot in CineD with further adjustments? I choose a homogenous color palette for a logical balance of tones, to unify different tones and to tame strongly saturated videoish tones, such as from the yellow sign or the red shirt. But still keeping the skincolor logic and plausible within the overall greenish tint. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AaronL Posted August 1, 2016 Share Posted August 1, 2016 wanted to bring out the warmth of the scene. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OliKMIA Posted August 1, 2016 Share Posted August 1, 2016 Used Lumetri on Premiere Pro Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Inazuma Posted August 2, 2016 Share Posted August 2, 2016 jase, Liam, iamoui and 3 others 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funkyou86 Posted August 8, 2016 Share Posted August 8, 2016 Hi folks! Thanks for your contributions, here's how I graded it: And here are the BEFORE/AFTER shots: I'm going to write a longer article on the mistakes I made and post it to EOShd forum, thanks for your help. Cheers! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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