IMPORTANT: if your camera does not shoot in 10 bit color do not use an aggressive LOG. My Sony a6600 shoots in 8 bit, so I use gentle picture profiles such as Cine 4. Aggressive logs like S-LOG try cram too much color detail into 8bits so you’ll end up with some weird color noise or banding while doing your color correction. If you have a camera that shoots 8 bit video, play around with your picture profiles to see what works best for you and your camera.
Fist of all, can you tell me how to get my *kodak easy share Zxxx to stop eatin batterys and how to make the images not blurry with horrible focus?*
*yeah… even know I love cameras of the DSLR size format, I am not spending thounds when my iPhone works fine… plus I don’t have to waste time setting it up just to relise the sunset or/and the clouds have already moved…*
First when exposing LoG footage you should expose slightly overexpose, usually around 30-50 percent depending on your subject, it might look burn on the precio but actually Log is highly capable of recovering highlight instead of shadows, so if you expose “your highlights” instead of your shadows, you will end with a noise image poor in detail on the shadows (apply only for log footage). And about the native iso is right to use your navite most of the times, but you just said that if you increase your iso you lose dynamic range that’s it’s also half true, you also lose dynamic range by using low iso too.
Your iso doesn’t matter for black magic raw. (With black magic cameras) You just have to choose one or the other if it’s dual iso and make sure you aren’t clipping. If you’re using something like Ursa mini without dual iso, it really doesn’t matter. I mainly use it for focus, but it doesn’t affect your exposure at all.
Bit of nonsense there, the dynamic range is set in stone and cannot be improved. You can only shoot within its limits. Either of the scene or the camera you are using
Log profile takes a lot of space 😭
So how do i know my camera’s native iso? I own a Canon Rebel T7
Dude! You are so wrong, it’s noticeable you have no experience at all with cameras, log footage or anything about 😢
IMPORTANT: if your camera does not shoot in 10 bit color do not use an aggressive LOG. My Sony a6600 shoots in 8 bit, so I use gentle picture profiles such as Cine 4. Aggressive logs like S-LOG try cram too much color detail into 8bits so you’ll end up with some weird color noise or banding while doing your color correction. If you have a camera that shoots 8 bit video, play around with your picture profiles to see what works best for you and your camera.
Fist of all, can you tell me how to get my *kodak easy share Zxxx to stop eatin batterys and how to make the images not blurry with horrible focus?*
*yeah… even know I love cameras of the DSLR size format, I am not spending thounds when my iPhone works fine… plus I don’t have to waste time setting it up just to relise the sunset or/and the clouds have already moved…*
For some reason my computer can’t read the c-log files from my cannon r8 why is this?
chill with that shutter click sound and ting sound my guy.
native iso sony zve10
not all yters can get 2 out of 3 wrong and be so confident…good luck
First when exposing LoG footage you should expose slightly overexpose, usually around 30-50 percent depending on your subject, it might look burn on the precio but actually Log is highly capable of recovering highlight instead of shadows, so if you expose “your highlights” instead of your shadows, you will end with a noise image poor in detail on the shadows (apply only for log footage). And about the native iso is right to use your navite most of the times, but you just said that if you increase your iso you lose dynamic range that’s it’s also half true, you also lose dynamic range by using low iso too.
Your iso doesn’t matter for black magic raw. (With black magic cameras) You just have to choose one or the other if it’s dual iso and make sure you aren’t clipping. If you’re using something like Ursa mini without dual iso, it really doesn’t matter. I mainly use it for focus, but it doesn’t affect your exposure at all.
Bit of nonsense there, the dynamic range is set in stone and cannot be improved. You can only shoot within its limits. Either of the scene or the camera you are using
What’s native iso of a6400?
My camera can’t shoot log
One vid on s23 ultra
bonus tip: if you dont have log because you use a cheaper camera (like i used to with a t7i) a polarizer can help you get some sky😊