Hi all,
I know this is not about VRAY, but there are a few people here who use Fusion and combustion and NUKE, and I have some question regarding this colour convertion.
Basically, here it is.
I have new compositor in the studio and we have been talking about, in his case combustion, and overall what technically happens to the Cineon LOG file.
The issue is hard to talk about, because the software he is using is not working with the information stored in this log space correctly, on the other hand in Fusion and NUKe it is reading and converting correctly. So I am wondering. Can some one explain the technical convertion that is happening in the process.
The process in question is taking a cineon log file converting it to a EXR file 32 bit or 16bit float, does not matter to me which.
This is what I know. The negative film is scanned and placed into the cineon log file, the entire exposure that was intended is captured. If you had your choice you would want to colour correct in Log due to this range for example. However we all know that all of our work is linear, many compositing processes expect linear values etc. There is no stead fast rule mind you, but it seems be a way of working as computers get faster etc.
We then need to convert the intended exposure range black and white points (standard is 95-685) as established by Kodak. You can change this so you can get every little value above this or below, but I am just working under the standard way for this discussion.
We then remove the log fuction from the cineon file and transfer it to linear exr float. This will have enough headroom to maintain what was captured in the log file, but allow us to work in a linear way which makes me happy for many reasons.
Now, one question that has come up, is CC or linear or not to CC in linear. My personal opinion is this: Log would be best, but since in float all the info is there it should not matter. Or if you can't work this way, linear, Log would be best.
Second question, to Key in Log or to Key in linear. My opinion on this is to Key is Linear due to my comment on compositing software. the log image in its native format is not telling the compositing software what the true value is there. correct? or false?
Finally, general compositing with log or linear. Basically since all transformations etc are done in a linear way working in log seems to make no sense. True or false?
Also, for those combustion people out there, when you use the bit depth converter, it does not seem to convert from log to linear correctly. It seems to clamp the values to 1. It does not preserve the dynamic range. Can anyone confirm this?
Well thanks for anyone who can help.
I know this is not about VRAY, but there are a few people here who use Fusion and combustion and NUKE, and I have some question regarding this colour convertion.
Basically, here it is.
I have new compositor in the studio and we have been talking about, in his case combustion, and overall what technically happens to the Cineon LOG file.
The issue is hard to talk about, because the software he is using is not working with the information stored in this log space correctly, on the other hand in Fusion and NUKe it is reading and converting correctly. So I am wondering. Can some one explain the technical convertion that is happening in the process.
The process in question is taking a cineon log file converting it to a EXR file 32 bit or 16bit float, does not matter to me which.
This is what I know. The negative film is scanned and placed into the cineon log file, the entire exposure that was intended is captured. If you had your choice you would want to colour correct in Log due to this range for example. However we all know that all of our work is linear, many compositing processes expect linear values etc. There is no stead fast rule mind you, but it seems be a way of working as computers get faster etc.
We then need to convert the intended exposure range black and white points (standard is 95-685) as established by Kodak. You can change this so you can get every little value above this or below, but I am just working under the standard way for this discussion.
We then remove the log fuction from the cineon file and transfer it to linear exr float. This will have enough headroom to maintain what was captured in the log file, but allow us to work in a linear way which makes me happy for many reasons.
Now, one question that has come up, is CC or linear or not to CC in linear. My personal opinion is this: Log would be best, but since in float all the info is there it should not matter. Or if you can't work this way, linear, Log would be best.
Second question, to Key in Log or to Key in linear. My opinion on this is to Key is Linear due to my comment on compositing software. the log image in its native format is not telling the compositing software what the true value is there. correct? or false?
Finally, general compositing with log or linear. Basically since all transformations etc are done in a linear way working in log seems to make no sense. True or false?
Also, for those combustion people out there, when you use the bit depth converter, it does not seem to convert from log to linear correctly. It seems to clamp the values to 1. It does not preserve the dynamic range. Can anyone confirm this?
Well thanks for anyone who can help.
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