Tools

Slugline. Simple, elegant screenwriting.

Red Giant Color Suite, with Magic Bullet Looks 2.5 and Colorista II

Needables
  • Sony Alpha a7S Compact Interchangeable Lens Digital Camera
    Sony Alpha a7S Compact Interchangeable Lens Digital Camera
    Sony
  • Panasonic LUMIX DMC-GH4KBODY 16.05MP Digital Single Lens Mirrorless Camera with 4K Cinematic Video (Body Only)
    Panasonic LUMIX DMC-GH4KBODY 16.05MP Digital Single Lens Mirrorless Camera with 4K Cinematic Video (Body Only)
    Panasonic
  • TASCAM DR-100mkII 2-Channel Portable Digital Recorder
    TASCAM DR-100mkII 2-Channel Portable Digital Recorder
    TASCAM
  • The DV Rebel's Guide: An All-Digital Approach to Making Killer Action Movies on the Cheap (Peachpit)
    The DV Rebel's Guide: An All-Digital Approach to Making Killer Action Movies on the Cheap (Peachpit)
    by Stu Maschwitz

Entries in Image Nerdery (53)

Tuesday
Feb282006

Linear Color Workflow in AE7, Part 5



Holy crap, film! Try this:
  1. Download Marcie.
  2. Import her into a new After Effects 7.0 project.
  3. Set the project to 32 bits per channel (float)
  4. Set your Project Working Space to Linear Adobe RGB
  5. Select Marcie and File > Interpret Footage > Main
  6. Click on More Options
  7. Under Conversion Method, select Kodak 5218 ICC Profile
  8. Hit OK
  9. Hit OK
  10. Drag Marcie to the Create Comp button
  11. With the new comp's View active, View > Proof Setup > Kodak 2383 Theater
  12. Select View > Proof Colors (switch it from unchecked to checked)
You're now working with a Cineon file in linear, scene-referred float, and accurately previewing how your work will looked filmed out on Kodak Vision film stock.

When you want to output back to log:

  1. Create an output comp that contains your linear Marcie comp
  2. Set Proof Colors to Unmanaged for this comp's view (Proof Colors should be checked)
  3. Apply the Color Profile Converter effect to the layer
  4. Leave Input Profile set to Project Working Space
  5. Set Output Profile to DPX Scene - Standard Camera Film
  6. Very important: Set Intent to Absolute Colorimetric
Output this comp to a Cineon sequence and it should match the original Marcie source.

You've now fully round-tripped a color managed, linear floating point film compositing pipeline. I don't know of any other compositing application that ships with this capability, "high end" or not!

But wait, there's more! Want to bake this film-look LUT into some NTSC video dailies?

  1. Add linear Marcie to a video output comp (NTSC res)
  2. This comp should also have Proof Colors on and set to Unmanaged
  3. Select Layer > New > Adjustment Layer
  4. Apply the Color Profile Converter effect to the layer
  5. Leave Input Profile set to Project Working Space
  6. Set Output Profile to DPX Scene - Standard Camera Film
  7. Very important: Set Intent to Absolute Colorimetric
  8. Apply a second Color Profile Converter
  9. Set Input Profile to DPX Theater Preview - Standard Print Film
  10. Set Output Profile to SMPTE-C
Smoove. Don't believe me? Download the project file (316kB zip). This workflow is compatible with Part 1 and, of course, Part 2.

Friday
Feb242006

Mini fans...

...I hear you. I know you would like to see the Ruby Tuesday spot online, and I am working on getting it up for you to see. Honest!



In the meantime, here's a glimpse of how I previsualized the choreography of the cars for the spot. I created an animatic using After Effects 7. I only had a few days, so I wanted to create an easy way to make some exciting car-to-car shots featuring four Mini Cooper S cars driving in tight, Blue Angels-like configuration.

What I did was create a rig that allowed me to animate a simple positioner (a null). The car would then follow the null, but with a certain amount of "slop." The suspension would bounce and sway (far too much to emulate an actual Mini, but that's creative license for you!). When I move the null to the left, the wheels steer, the car swerves, the tail kicks out, and the body rolls, all with two simple keyframes of animation. In this way I was able to quickly and painlessly animate four cars per shot and crank out 20 or 30 shots in a few days.

To capture the gritty, racing-inspired authenticity that I wanted for this spot, I looked at a lot of car chase movies, especially Ronin. One signature characteristic of Frankenheimer's amazing footage is that the camera car is experiencing the same extreme forces and duress as the car it is chasing. So I created a fifth Mini and "bolted" my After Effects camera it it, to give my animation a car-to-car photography feel.

In the movie below you can see a shot from the finished spot as it appeared in the animatic. I've extended the shot and turned off the camera car's motion so you can see the hero Mini in action. The null is represented by the little red, green and blue axis — you can see how simple its motion is compared to how lively the car is.

The cars look almost 3D, but they are in fact 2.5D, composed entirely of 2D cards in 3D space. You can see this when the wheels steer towards the camera. Why create such a complex 3D project inside After Effects? Because you can!

This animatic, cut together in Final Cut Pro, became the blueprint of our shoot, which spanned two days and involved the Ruby Tuesday bar set (with and without the actual bar in place) and four full-sized Minis. More on that later, but hopefully this fun little animation will keep the Mini owners satisfied for a little while!


Tuesday
Feb212006

Linear Color Workflow in AE7, Part 4

What goes up must come down, and what was input must be output.

In Part 1 we discussed converting your sRGB footage to your AE7 project's linear working space via the Color Profile Converter effect. Thanks to the ICC display compensation, these linear images look correct on your calibrated monitor — but what happens when it's time to render?

Once again, it's Color Profile Converter to the rescue. What I like to do is create a comp called something like "Video Output," and in this comp I create an Adjustment Layer with the the Color Profile Converter effect set to Input: Project Working Space, Output: sRGB (or whatever the input was).

The first thing you'll notice when you do this is that your image looks too bright. The display compensation doesn't know that you've gammafied your image, so it's still correcting as if it was linear. You're double-gammaed! The solution is to go to the View menu and set Proof Setup to Unmanaged, and then turn Proof Colors on. This confusing two-step turns off ICC display compensation for this comp, and now your image should look correct once again (although without the benefit of any color management at all).

This Proof Colors setting is remembered per comp, but if it ever gets messed up, just remember that linear comps need Proof Colors off, and vid comps need it on.

Now you can apply any last color corrections that you may wish to do in vid space, such as the three-way color balancer, and then output to your usual formats. You've succesfully round-tripped video footage though a linear, floating-point color pipeline in After Effects!

Tuesday
Feb212006

AE7 on fxguide

Hear Steve Kilisky and Dave Simons discuss After Effects 7.0 on vfxguide's podcast. They discuss the new features and touch on HDR, but in a subsequent episode yours truly will be picking up where they left off and getting into some of the nitty griity of working in linear floating point in AE7. I'm a podcast addict and excited to finally be on one!

Fxguide's podcast is one of my favorites and an excellent knowledge resource. I highly recommend you subscribe (iTunes link) and check out the archives, especially the back-to-back episodes on the effects in Batman Begins.

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