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Stunning Good Looks

by Art Adams

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Monday, March 24, 2008

RED: Not a vampire camera at all. It loves daylight!

I’ve now had independent confirmation from a couple of people who watched my RED build 14 exposure tests and have had great luck treating their RED as a daylight film stock. Apparently clipped highlights are significantly less of a problem and noise in the shadows drops way down. It’s a much smoother look.

If you haven’t had a chance to test your RED before shooting to see how well you can recover clipped highlights, it might be a good idea to go HMI or daylight if at all possible. I’m hoping to test recovering clipped highlights and blue filtration by the end of the week, so stay tuned.

Meanwhile, look back a couple of posts in this blog if you need to learn how to recover clipped highlights in Red Alert, and remember that the same control in Red Cine, called “highlight,” does work--but you need to “jiggle” or double-click another control before the new value takes effect. That is slated to be corrected in the next build.

CamerasPost ProductionTraining • (1) Comments • Most recent comments by: Graeme Nattress, • Permalink

Monday, February 18, 2008

HOW TO: Use a Color Meter

Trust them as far as you can throw them

Color meters were never designed to be used to measure light sources with a broken spectrum. How much should we trust them?

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Training • (4) Comments • Most recent comments by: Art Adams, donatello, Art Adams, Scott Gentry, • Permalink

Friday, February 15, 2008

HOW TO: Manually White/Black Balance with a Vectorscope and Paintbox

Not all cameras white/black balance properly. Learn how to use a paintbox and waveform/vectorscope to do it manually.

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Training • (2) Comments • Most recent comments by: David Hudson, Adam Wilt, • Permalink

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Stunning Good Looks by Art Adams

Art AdamsArt Adams A native of Northern California, Art Adams spent ten years in LA--first at film school (Loyola Marymount) and then working in the film industry. He started out as a camera assistant on low budget features and worked his way into spots, music videos, features, sitcoms and episodic television shows. He transitioned from assistant to operator to DP by the time he returned to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1993.

Currently Art focuses his energies on shooting spots and high end corporate productions, as well as special venue and blue/green screen projects. He likes jobs that make his brain hurt with ingenuity and cleverness. He has been published in HD Video Pro, American Cinematographer, Camera Operator Magazine and Film/Tape World.

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