DPX footage (for example from a Red camera) typically looks "flat" with low contrast and low saturation. The idea, as I understand it, is that the full range is put into the 0-1 range of the 10-bit DPX file, kind of like a film negative, the post facility would then color grade this, making it look good, and provide a LUT for this.
My question is how to match CG to this? You don't want to match to the LUT, but rather apply the LUT in the VFB. However it makes little sense to match the render to the flattened DPX since this is not really what the footage looked like, but more how it is packed into the DPX file, like clothing squeezed into one of those vacuum bags. In other words, it is practical, but ugly and visually wrong. I believe this is not a matter of incorrectly viewing a log file in Nuke however, and instead characteristic of the digital Red camera, which looks very different from a film camera.
Curious to hear how folks deal with this. I'm almost thinking it would be good to get two LUTS, one where the DPX is unflattened (similar to how one processes raw camera footage) and a second LUT where the "look" is applied. We could then match the render to the unflattened footage.
Thoughts?
My question is how to match CG to this? You don't want to match to the LUT, but rather apply the LUT in the VFB. However it makes little sense to match the render to the flattened DPX since this is not really what the footage looked like, but more how it is packed into the DPX file, like clothing squeezed into one of those vacuum bags. In other words, it is practical, but ugly and visually wrong. I believe this is not a matter of incorrectly viewing a log file in Nuke however, and instead characteristic of the digital Red camera, which looks very different from a film camera.
Curious to hear how folks deal with this. I'm almost thinking it would be good to get two LUTS, one where the DPX is unflattened (similar to how one processes raw camera footage) and a second LUT where the "look" is applied. We could then match the render to the unflattened footage.
Thoughts?
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