Originally posted by Joelaff
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Created and applied LUT in VFB looks different
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Originally posted by piotrus3333 View Post
That is exactly how it looks to me, linear above 1 if lut covers 0-1 range only. But Fusion supports "proper" cube format luts that cover as much range as you need, e.g. Linear to CineonLog can be done with cube lut with enough precision.
Since you have done a lot of research on this, what do you think is the best "fix" that Chaos could apply? In an ideal world we could simply save a LUT out of the VFB and then apply it in Fusion (or any compositor) and the output would match.
FYI: Anyone using Fusion that wants to do Reinhard burn (Exposure->Highlight Burn) in Fusion you can use this Custom Tool node I made, which uses the same math as VRay (according to Vlado) ReinhardBurn2.zip Note the mask input triangle to the node is light grey rather than blue due to the way macros inputs work in Fusion.
Attached FilesLast edited by Joelaff; 19-01-2023, 12:19 PM.
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Fix from Chaos? I don't think it is needed that much. VFB is hardly a colour grading tool. It should accept some basic luts and that is it. OCIO layer would be nice and useful as now you can only do one conversion on top of layer stack.
and the linear interpolation Fusion does on lut from VFB looks like that (it was S curve in VFB with curves layer saved as lut):
Marcin Piotrowski
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Originally posted by Joelaff View Post
Fusion's LUT support works fine, yeah. I guess the LUTs out of VFB are flawed.
Since you have done a lot of research on this, what do you think is the best "fix" that Chaos could apply? In an ideal world we could simply save a LUT out of the VFB and then apply it in Fusion (or any compositor) and the output would match.
FYI: Anyone using Fusion that wants to do Reinhard burn (Exposure->Highlight Burn) in Fusion you can use this Custom Tool node I made, which uses the same math as VRay (according to Vlado) ReinhardBurn2.zip Note the mask input triangle to the node is light grey rather than blue due to the way macros inputs work in Fusion.Marcin Piotrowski
youtube
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Originally posted by piotrus3333 View PostFix from Chaos? I don't think it is needed that much. VFB is hardly a colour grading tool. It should accept some basic luts and that is it. OCIO layer would be nice and useful as now you can only do one conversion on top of layer stack.
Also, it seems like a lot more people than you or I might think do use the VFB for the final processing (or almost final). Not everyone has access to, or knowledge to use, a bunch of different software.
I think I would like the VFB to be to export a LUT that would reproduce the effects identical to the VFB in the likes of Fusion. I never used to think that much, but having used in more in a couple of recent projects it would be nice to use that as a starting point, rather than re-grading, simply because we end up showing samples out of the VFB to agency/client, and then if the re-grade is different sometimes we are chasing our tail to get it the same. Of course we could back to the old method of just always saving out EXR and loading it into comp, which works fine, but requires an extra step each time.
That is what I figured from what I saw... just gain past 1.0. Curious-- how did you generate that graph image? Is that actually from a LUT, or just an example of roughly what it does?
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The graph is a waveform view of 0-5 black and white gradient with lut aplied. From Fusion.
VFB grading transfered via lut to Fusion 1:1 (i'm assuming you output linear srgb):
VFB - start with full highlight burn (so simple Reinhard y=x/(x+1)) + color corrections + display correction srgb or 2.2
turn off highlight burn and save the lut.
Fusion - Reinhard + lut from VFB + View LUT matching the one in VFB
done. This is 1:1.
you can use CineonLog in place of Reinhard. Save from VFB a lut with no adjustments, load it into Lookup Table layer with Work in log.Marcin Piotrowski
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