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Monday, February 02, 2009

Filed under: CamerasPost ProductionProductionTipsTraining

The Not-So-Technical Guide to S-Log and Log Gamma Curves

Art Adams | 02/02

What you need to know about log curves—with hardly any math at all

POST: NOW WHAT?

Post color correction couldn’t be easier. Sony lifts the blacks up a bit in S-Log it will be necessary to bring them down to a normal crisp level. (This is not necessary when using Digital Praxis curves as their bases are locked at 0%.) After that it’s just a matter of setting gamma and gain such that you like what you see, and then proceed to perform any other corrections you like. The only time a LUT is necessary is if you are grading for a deliverable that is in a format other than HD, such as a film out.

I had an interesting discussion with Steve Shaw about the choice of color gamut to use in S-Log, or with any form of Log curve. There are several built-in gamut choices in the Sony F35 and F23, but the most useful ones are probably the F900R, which is a very pleasant rendition of Rec 709, and S-Gamut, which captures every color the camera can see, and which Sony says is very close to the color gamut that the human eye can see. When I saw these choices it occurred to me that if I was shooting for both a film out and for broadcast I’d probably want to shoot in S-Gamut and monitor in Rec 709, because that way I’d capture all the colors available to the camera while still being able to view a reasonable image on a Rec 709 compatible display. Steve says that, in situations where you are going for a film out, capturing more information is always better than capturing less, so why not shoot S-Gamut for a film out and then shrink the color space to Rec 709 for broadcast? But he also says that the perceptual differences between Rec 709 and S-Gamut are minimal—because we see colors logarithmically. The farther out from the center of the CIE chart we look the bigger the steps between colors have to be before we see any difference.

A very helpful guide to colorimetry can be found at the International Cinematographers Guild web site.

Thanks to Steve Shaw, George Palmer, Michael Bravin and Dhanendra Patel for their very generous help and feedback over the course of writing this article. Any errors should be attributed solely to the author.

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The Best of Stunning Good Looks

Art Adams | 08/30

A directory of my best articles, sorted by topic.

This entry is a guide to my best articles, sorted by topic. Enjoy!

How to get the “24p” look for your live-switched multicam shoot

Allan Tépper | 02/10

A contracted article, sponsored by Datavideo Corporation.

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Our friends at Datavideo recently asked me to write an article called How to get the “24p” look for your live-switched multicam shoot. The article covers many factors…

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PVC News Staff | 02/06

The Amazing Race uses Anton/Bauer to ensure all cameras have enough power to capture every exciting moment the contestants encounter.

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Since their first day of production back in 2001, crew members of the hit reality television series “The Amazing Race” have counted on Anton/Bauer® products to power them through…

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You say that the origin of ETTR is in wanting to encode data more precisely.

I don’t know about the origins of ETTR, but I would say the main advantage of ETTR is not increased precision, but decreased noise (because darker areas are noisier on digital cameras).

Posted by Charles Angus  on  01/31  at  09:04 PM


The best way to think of exposing digital cinematography cameras is to think of them as being like reversal film stock… Make any sense with respect to ETTR?

The problem with digital cameras is they can clip too harshly, so make sure highlight exposure is correct, and almost let shadow detail fall where it will, adding fill lighting as required.

The extended range gamma curves described here help by maximising the range available, so putting off the clip (saturation) point.

Posted by Steve Shaw  on  02/04  at  10:16 AM


good article!

Posted by billS  on  02/05  at  06:16 PM


Hey Art!
Thanks for the Article.

I have to say that one thing that really bugs me is the inconsistency in definitions/understandings of all this business.

After reading a thread on CML and thinking that I “got it”, I saw people chime in on the thread and disagree with the person who basically schooled everyone.

Where do we draw the line? (or the curve)? Who is to believe?

When is this information going to be widely available, and in layman’s terms? It becomes increasingly frustrating to try and figure out the magic of a camera, and waste your energy on doing so, instead of creating good work.

How can someone like me visualize the differences in Linear/log, instead of reading it? After all, most of us behind the camera don’t react to something emotionally till we visualize it…

Thank you for the article. I will have to read it a few more times to have everything sink in.

Jamie

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  01/21  at  05:01 PM


I should probably work on making it a lot simpler to understand. Here’s the bottom line:

Linear records ALL the data off the sensor, but the way the sensor records information it saves much more highlight info than shadow info. 50% of linear data describes detail in your brightest highlights… which is a complete waste, because you don’t often have much in the way of bright detailed highlights in the shot.

Log remaps these values when they are stored so that you only record perceptually equal steps (steps that your eye can see the difference in)  instead of every bit of data in linear, which records tons more info in highlights than the eye can see.

Linear gamma looks really dark. It must have a gamma curve applied to it to make it look proper on a CRT or LCD display. In raw form it contains every bit the sensor captured.

Log gamma looks really flat. It doesn’t contain nearly as much data as linear gamma but most of the time that’s okay, because it records brightness in perceptually equal steps and doesn’t favor either highlights or shadows.

Both should offer excellent results, depending on the post house. RED’s “raw” isn’t really linear raw because it has a slightly different gamma curve applied, but it’s pretty close and it is 12-bit color (although heavily compressed). S-Log is only 10-bit color, but that seems to be fine as it hasn’t hobbled the numerous TV shows and features shot that way.

12-bit linear has close to 4096 possible steps of brightness per color channel. (Some bits at the top and bottom are reserved for meta data.) This is linear data so half of this goes immediately to the brightest highlight details. Not very efficient.

10-bit log has close to 1024 steps of brightness per color channel. (Some bits are reserved here as well, so the entire range isn’t used for image data.) The brightness values are spread out much more evenly than linear, though.

I’m not going to say I understand it all well enough to lay out all the definitions and be right on every one. I’ve got an overall idea of how all this is supposed to work. The bottom line is that both methods work fine as long as your post house is competent.

The one thing you don’t want to do is have a post pipeline where the footage drops down to 8-bits. That looks really nasty, and can happen when dealing with Final Cut Pro or if the footage gets dumped to HDCAM at some point. The banding and color noise are horrible.

Posted by Art Adams  on  01/21  at  05:28 PM


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The Best of Stunning Good Looks

Art Adams | 08/30

A directory of my best articles, sorted by topic.

This entry is a guide to my best articles, sorted by topic. Enjoy!

How to get the “24p” look for your live-switched multicam shoot

Allan Tépper | 02/10

A contracted article, sponsored by Datavideo Corporation.

image

Our friends at Datavideo recently asked me to write an article called How to get the “24p” look for your live-switched multicam shoot. The article covers many factors…

Anton/Bauer Provides Rock-Solid Dependability For “The Amazing Race” As It Treks Across The Globe

PVC News Staff | 02/06

The Amazing Race uses Anton/Bauer to ensure all cameras have enough power to capture every exciting moment the contestants encounter.

image

Since their first day of production back in 2001, crew members of the hit reality television series “The Amazing Race” have counted on Anton/Bauer® products to power them through…

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My love affair with RED Digital Cinema began in 2007, when my brief stint as demo artist in the NAB RED booth turned into a regular gig at events and trade shows.…

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