I love it - although my Deutsh education stopped in highschool with 2/6 score and teacher telling me that either I hate Deutch lang or her or both (she was right )
I find that subtitles in youtube are IMO the best option - I even watch one channel regarding 3d printing that sometimes uses Cantonese (or Mandarin?) but itās subbed in english so anybody can watch it and also help translating to other langs.
You can copy & paste the German transcript (of what youtube thinks you said). Itās maybe a better starting point than starting from zero, writing everything down etc.
I have to say that I really like the added voice-over, it just gives it that extra bit of info and personal touch that I āmissedā in the silent versions. The again, although Iām Dutch, I do understand German which might not be the case for everyone. Guess thatās what the subtitles are forā¦
Anyway: Thanks for uploading another nice tutorial episode!
A challenging image and youāve shown us, explaining your steps along the way, that it can be turned into a good edit in a few ,relatively, easy steps.
BTW: Not sure if this is at all possible from a licensing point of view, but would you be willing to post the RAW image you use in your videoās in the future?
Iām interested by your complete neutral preset. I get the same module display as yours, but from the image standpoint I donāt get the complete neutrality ā¦
Inputs on this would be appreciated. Thanks !
Watching this video really inspired me to try out some old video which was difficult to post process. Would mind if I can share the same edit with the RAW and and the generated XMP file for reference. Some feedback will be useful to correct my post processing learning.
In this case unfortunately not, because this was a contract work, but in itself I can do it in the next ones.
Yes, that is difficult, I only know that the medium grey should be 18.45, contrast 1 and latitude 100% (= completely linear). As for white relative exposure and black relative exposure, I donāt know exactly. I guess it depends on the dynamics of your camera. But we can ask @anon41087856 what the āmost neutral settingā would be for filmic RGB, where the module is on, but doesnāt make any changes to the image at first?
Yes, please. I recommend that you make a post as [Play raw], and you can also name difficulties you are confronted with, so that I and other darktable users can help you.
Filmic canāt have neutral/no-op settings, just because it has a logarithm inside, which doesnāt tolerate zeros in RGB values, while its input can be zero. So there is always some lifting to do. The most you could do would be to set contrast = 1, latitude to 100%, scene grey to 18%, scene white to 2.45 EV and scene black to⦠-infinite EV.
You mentioned something like that in your video so I figured as much for the current image. Future RAWās would be nice, but donāt feel obliged in any way if you arenāt able to for whatever reason!
I also believe it is camera dependent. My Nikon D750 has a very nice dynamic range, and a filmic setting for that one doesnāt work too well with my lumix pocket camera.
Thanks a lot! This is what I wanted to know. This is a very good setup if I should explain to someone how Filmic works, and they can then visually follow what is happening as changes are made.
I tried to explain Filmic RGB to my wife based off of @anon41087856 videos and ended up with ābasically math happens, but instead of uncontrollable curve youāve got values you can control!ā
Iām no AP, but I think itās not only camera dependent but also scene-dependent. Sameās with tone equalizer. The āfilmic universalā settings of setting middle gray to 18.45 and then doing white/black point results in huge differences in same camera depending on scene lighting, contrasts etc.
Additionally - I think that filmic helps me to squeeze most of my cameraās DR by allowing better control. For example - I recently shared this Play Raw:
on base curve I couldnāt get jack from it (and scenes from the whole show). My photo group friends using their tools of choice had same problems too⦠However filmic allowed me to do way more pixel pushing and get better DR than I thought possible.
That makes sense⦠This combined with your post about not overexposing gives me another idea for a question: if one were to do dumb stuff with partially overexposed image, like trying to bring overall lightness down by sending RGB values into zeroes/negatives - that would make filmic not happy at all, right? Thatās why itās actually better to underexpose a bit, then push raw +1EV and start with filmic @ 18.45% grey?
Hmm⦠Do you think you could make some of your future Editing moments with darktable a Play Raws? Like, at the end add RAW + created XMP here with in playraw tag ad add link to it to your Youtube video description?
Play Raw is great for that! I can attest to that!
TBH - current filmic rgb presets maybe ok-ish, but presets like completelly neutral etc (non DR-based, but rather usage based) would be greatly appreciated!