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Korro Films
United Kingdom
Приєднався 17 кві 2017
Korro Films is an award-winning film production agency, set up by Ollie Kenchington in 2008. Korro produces exceptional brand films, commercials and documentaries, for leading global organisations. Whether he is shooting, editing or grading, Ollie is an assured practitioner across all areas of filmmaking, giving him a deep understanding of the creative process, which allows his agency to flourish in this competitive industry. Korro are frequently commissioned directly by internationally recognised brands, such as Apple, Canon, X-Rite and Byron. In 2019, Korro Films won a prestigious Brand Film Festival: London award for its brand documentary work with UWE Bristol. Korro's work has been featured in publications such as Pro Movie Maker and Definition Magazine and Ollie himself has made guest appearances on Film Riot, with Ryan Connolly, Indie Film Hustle, with Alex Ferrari, and was a contributing writer for Cinema5D for several years.
Відео
Shinobi II Calibration Tutorial
Переглядів 9028 днів тому
A quick tutorial showing the new method for calibrating Atomos' monitors, using a direct connection over USB-C. The Shinobi II is the first monitor to support direct connection to a Calibrite probe and is a vast improvement over the old method, which required both a computer and an expensive proprietary cable to achieve the same result.
Dan Simpkins - Stories in Motion Winner 2023
Переглядів 2278 місяців тому
Brand documentary for Canon UK and CVP, telling the story of Dan Simpkins, who won the 'Stories in Motion' competition in 2023.
'Three Ravens' by Masa (Music Video)
Переглядів 33211 місяців тому
'Three Ravens' by Masa (Music Video)
Beginner's Guide to Davinci Resolve 18.5 - Trailer
Переглядів 117Рік тому
www.mzed.com/courses/the-beginners-guide-to-davinci-resolve?tap_a=17272-420962&tap_s=206325-34b833
Horrell and Horrell
Переглядів 165Рік тому
Horrell & Horrell is led by Jules & Steve Horrell, whose culinary journey includes At the Chapel, Babington House, and most recently, the Michelin-acclaimed Roth Bar & Grill in Bruton, where they built a profile for exceptional hospitality, innovative events and cooking over fire. Having worked side by side for 15 years, Jules & Steve are now delighted to have launched their first solo venture ...
Foals
Переглядів 101Рік тому
Playful foals galloping in the fields, as the sun goes down on a hot summer's day. Shot on Canon EOS R5 C, 70-200mm f2.8L RF with NiSi Allure Black Mist filter. UHD, 100fps @ 25fps
Canon PTZ Apps Launch
Переглядів 112Рік тому
Launch film for Canon's PTZ Auto-Tracking and Auto-Loop apps.
Midwifery Nursing Degree at UWE Bristol
Переглядів 350Рік тому
A film to encourage people from diverse social and ethnic backgrounds to seek a career in midwifery.
VR Demo
Переглядів 8262 роки тому
VR 180 walk down Cheap Street in Frome, Somerset. Shot in 8K on the Canon EOS R5 C with Dual Fisheye RF lens.
Canon Case Study - Middlesex University
Переглядів 1792 роки тому
Canon Case Study - Middlesex University
The Definitive Guide to DaVinci Resolve (Trailer)
Переглядів 1892 роки тому
The Definitive Guide to DaVinci Resolve (Trailer)
X-Rite (Calibrite) ColorChecker Video Tutorial
Переглядів 31 тис.2 роки тому
X-Rite (Calibrite) ColorChecker Video Tutorial
Standing Stones (Shot on Canon EOS R5 C)
Переглядів 9382 роки тому
Standing Stones (Shot on Canon EOS R5 C)
Canon EOS R5 C - First Look with Ollie Kenchington
Переглядів 27 тис.2 роки тому
Canon EOS R5 C - First Look with Ollie Kenchington
Canon EOS C70 - First Look with Ollie Kenchington
Переглядів 2 тис.2 роки тому
Canon EOS C70 - First Look with Ollie Kenchington
Reighton Wood (RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2021)
Переглядів 2342 роки тому
Reighton Wood (RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2021)
Advanced Editing in DaVinci Resolve (Trailer)
Переглядів 2552 роки тому
Advanced Editing in DaVinci Resolve (Trailer)
Gorgeous. I've seen a lot of this footage over the last year. The colors!! 100% Canon?
@@scottievee330 Thank you. Yep, all Canon.
Guys, I am a newbie! This video is great but I am not able to see my vectorscope without he 6 colors (lines) like in the presentation. Can tell me how I set that up? I am using Davinci 19 studio
So the middle 18% gray exposure chip reflects 45-50 ire? I thought that Calibrite declared that middle gray chip to be 40 ire and would therefore result in a good exposure in a flat 709 profile if exposed to 40. Does that mean if we expose to 40 on that middle gray chip that we are technically underexposed?
I’ve not seen Calibrite refer to that chip as anything other than 18% reflectance. Where did you see them label it as 40 IRE? Most people would place 18% grey around 45 IRE, sometimes a bit higher. I’ve not met many people that would expose it at 40 IRE, but it depends on the sensor and what gamma you’re using. For example, the Arri 35 gives the best image if you expose middle grey much lower than other cameras. As a general rule of thumb, though, I’d advise sticking to 45ish.
@@korrofilms On the Calibrite product page for the ColorChecker video they stated "Gray Levels: Four larger steps for even gray balance, including white, 40IRE gray, deep gray, and high gloss black reference patches". So that's why I figured under a standard rec709 profile that the middle gray swatch should expose to 40ire but I've been reading so many varying opinions online. Thanks!
very good tutorial. What is your color maneger setting i see you use raw footage. Thank you sorry for my english
Excellent presentation and explanation of the importance and methodology of accurate white balancing and colour correction.
Thanks for thr info!
I was struggling with Davinci's automatic feature for the color checker, but understanding how to use it manually, wow, thank you so much!
My pleasure!
Thank you for this video. It has been very helpful in helping me learn to learn how to use the color tools in Resolve. I keep coming back to it.
@@GPZ611 you’re welcome 👍🏻
This is definitely one of those videos that you wish you had watched years ago. Absolute bangor of a tutorial. Thank you.
@@garethjones1 you’re welcome ☺️
Ollie! I was hoping to see something from you about the C400? I love your work and color grades.
@@scottievee330 I’ll hopefully get some time with it next month, but stars haven’t quite aligned so far. Thanks. ☺️
This is the best tutorial I've ever seen! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. I really appreciate it!
❤❤❤❤❤
Finally I have an idea about what is going on. This is by far the best tutorial. Thank you very much.
Mark Gary barlow..haroud is oll them perfecty bealtiful.go on playing
What checker is this ?
Very, very helpful tutorial. I learned so much from watching it. Thanks so much for creating it for us. Brilliant.
Lovely. Feels like I am looking over your shoulder again in Peter’s chambers.
Ollie really is a great instructor. I bought a subscription of MZed Pro for Phillip Blooms tutorials, and ended up watching all Ollies work as well.
Thanks Kevin 🙏🏻
@@korrofilms your more than welcome 🙏
Color matching temperature must be 6500k if you "print" for rec709 D65 standard
This can’t be right. I’ll look in to it, but why give us the option, if it’s always going to be set to 6500K? At the very least, you’d expect a drop down menu to choose from a couple of other less common white points, like D55. Why give us an adjustable slider, if this was truly what this parameter is intended for? Can anyone link to the article/video where this was mentioned, so I can check it out?
@@korrofilms check the white point of delivery formats and apply them correctly. For instance, you can compar Rec709 d65 and cinema DCI d60. When you photoprinting you use d50. Etc.
Extremely helpful. Many thanks!
Great tutorial, thank you for posting! Very helpful and clear explanations. One question...when using the auto match feature, you mention when selecting color temperature, you're using the value you shot the footage at. In another tutorial, a colorist says this setting is not the temperature you shot at, rather, this value is the target color temperature of the color space...in this case REC 709. Therefore, she says to leave the value at 6500K. I'm not exactly sure what she means... but have you tried keeping it instead of using 5600K?
Hi Scott, thanks for your kind words about my tutorial. As for your note about this other colourist’s comments, that’s very interesting! It doesn’t really stack up to logic, however, as the white point for broadcast is D65 (6500k) in most countries, and D55 (5500k) in a handful of others. If that parameter was indeed meant to be set to your output colour space’s target white point, surely it would be a pop-up menu with D55, D61, D63 and D65 as options, not a sliding scale where you can input any value you want. My understanding is that, in order for the algorithm to know if your charts primaries and secondaries are in the right place, it must know where white is meant to be first. So this value should be set to the white balance value your camera was set to. This is the same as when I manually do it, where I use the white balance side of the chart first, to determine the starting point for all my subsequent hue and sat adjustments to the primary and secondary reference chips. If you do all the hue and sat adjustments without setting the white balance up first, the results are warped and clearly wrong, not dissimilar to how the Color Match looks, in fact! I’ve always suspected that this parameter is the cause of this feature not working correctly, for this reason. Any way, this is all just conjecture, but I like to think I’m right 😝
I’m new to video, i fly drones indoors, always struggle with colour grading afterwards when I have shot in D log. I need to get myself one of these charts and follow this tutorial, very helpful thanks.
Thanks ☺️. They do make an XL version, which is good for drones, but pretty expensive (and doesn’t have a WB side).
Excellent tutorial--thank you! I wonder; have you tried the automated color checker function recently? I wonder if Blackmagic has improved its less than stellar performance?
I haven’t tried it recently, no. Would love to think they’ve fixed it, but I’ve not seen any release notes suggesting it has been fixed. I’ve got to download the v19 beta soon, so I’ll give the Color Match another go then 👍🏻
@@korrofilms Awesome! And again, your tutorial was a pleasant and rewarding experience.
Love it !!! 👏
Great tutorial. I do have a question though. You did "pull" the length of the colours in Hue vs Sat to be exactly in the box. Does the same method also apply when using Final Cut Pro?
Final Cut Pro’s Vectorscope doesn’t give you the option to zoom to 2x, so I’d suggest setting the zoom to 1.3x (its maximum), boosting the saturation in an initial colour wheels adjustment, then do your hue vs hue and hue vs sat adjustments after that. Place the primary and secondary colour patches in the boxes (the image will look very over saturated for now), then finally knock the overall saturation back down in that initial colour wheels adjustment, until you feel the image looks good. Less accurate than doing it in Resolve, but the main thing is the hue angles will be accurate and the relative strength of saturation in each hue will be correct too. I do a lot of grading in FCP X and this approach works well enough. 👍🏻
@@korrofilms thanks for the tips, I've just applied today and perhaps I was not as good as you, need more training! I have a dark-brown complexion. First, I used your white balance colour technique. Followed by the hue vs hue and hue vs sat, then normalise the saturation downward. I noticed that my skin tone turned to "reddish". Then using mask and hue vs hue to correct on the skin tone line, the yellowish/greenish affected the entire scene. What is the right technique to alter just my skin tone?
@@halimrahman I’ve noticed FCP X tends to boost red saturation more than it should, which may explain why your skin looked too red. In terms of adjusting just the skin tone, you can use the hue vs hue curve or create a colour mask and adjust with the colour wheel.
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This explaination is by far the most comprehensive I've seen. Thank you very much!
Thanks a lot.
Thank you very much for this fantastic tutorial. Your explanations are clear, concise, and extremely informative. It's been as pleasure to watch and learn! 👍
Thanks Peter! 😊
i should use color grade and color correction after CST or before, please tell me/ i don't underatsnd(((
Absolutely brilliant tutorial! Thank you so much!
oh boy how complex. i have a nikon z9 and it has no scopes to match the righ values
Not even a histogram? How about an hdmi port, so you can use the scopes on an external monitor?
@@korrofilms yeah there is a hystogram. )
but how it works with the hystogram
@@voederbietels It’s much harder with only a histogram, but if the chart is filling most of the frame, you should be able to see the 90% spike on the graph.
this was so helpful, thanks
Sir.. thank you soooo much for this video.. helped me a lot... but. a question.. on this case we don't use the "color space transform" right? im not sure if my question is silly but, just for sure...thank you again
I didn’t in this demo, so as not to confuse beginners too much. But you absolutely can apply a CST or use Resolve’s colour managed workflow, then tweak on top.
ok.. thank you for responsive answer.. .please, usually I use PRORESS from Ninja recording canon gamut clog3. and use last node to transforme .. but when record in HDMI RAW , canon r5c using NINJA V+ can't use this file on Davinci.. some tip to transform it? thank you my friend @korrofilms
@@korrofilms when im using the clog 3 I just do what you did on this video.. and "bum" feel like perfect to start creative color.... don't need to use the node with cat... some problem with that?
No problem to do it that way.
You’ll have to use FCP X to transcode the Pro Res raw.
Thank you so much for this wonderful video. I am new to color correction and cinematography, so please forgive me if my question sounds dumb. If I use slightly warmer color lights, lets say 3200K lights and cooler colors at 6500K and my camera is set at 4500K, How can I use a ColorChecker in capturing both the colors appropriately with no parts of the image having any neutral colors.
Hi there, and thanks for your kind words about the tutorial. In your example, where you are shooting “off temperature” I probably wouldn’t bother using the chart at all, especially if I was shooting with a camera who’s colour matrix I was familiar with. I would just pay close attention to any skin tones on the vectorscope when grading. However, if you were using a camera that was new to you, or you were worried about a particular piece of set/wardrobe/product you had in shot appearing faithful, then you could temporarily make all lights match your camera’s white point (4500K in your example), white balance and shoot the charts, then put your lights back again. This way, you can ensure everything is neutral and accurate, before the lights change. The only variable you’re then left with is how accurately the lights follow the Planckian locus, as they move to 3200K and 6500K. If they drift off, you may have some unwanted tint present in the associated areas of the frame. But, then, this is where good lights are important, regardless of scenario! Kino, Arri, Litepanels - they all perform well when it comes to accurate whites and predictable Kelvin adjustments that follow the Planckian locus. One last tip, based on your scenario… if there was a specific product or item in the shot you wanted 100% faithful, you could use small mirrors to bounce a 4500K pool of light on to it, which would help it stay untinted and accurate, where other areas are pushed warm/cool. 👍🏻
@@korrofilms What you said about shooting in a neutral color first and then shooting again with different light colors makes a lot of sense to me. Atleast I would know where I stand with the actual colors, and build from there. Rightnow I cant afford the expensive lights, but I would just hope the ones I have are not lying about their CRI ratings. As I am new to cinematography, I’m still getting used to the colors of my camera and figuring out the accurate colors in resolve later had been a major bottleneck. I’ve never ordered a product faster after watching a video than I did yesterday after watching your video. I watch a lot videos in youtube where the relevant information of a 10 minutes video can be summed up in a minute. A spend about a couple of hours yesterday making notes from this video. Thank you again!
Brilliant video. Clear and easy to understand. Thank you!
You’re very welcome 😊
What an inspiring short glimpse of amazing skill at work, thank you 😊
Bro i love you thanks you!
Everything is fine here just wanted a quick reminder about your appointment
Happy new year eve Gary Barlow
Thank you so much for this great Tutorial! It is the best I could find on youtube. There is one super important detail when Color correcting the Canon C200 RAW Light Files. You need to do the Exposure correction with the HDR Grade instead of the color wheels. This makes a big difference. Timeline Color Space set to Davinci Wide Gamut.
Amazing. Gorgeous in all directions. C70?
N700 PTZ plus a bit of handheld R5 C thrown in for variety 👌🏻
Grazie😊
Prego 👍🏻
finally a video that fully explains everything about the checker and how to use it and also why there is a difference between the photo and video checker.
Brilliant, Ollie. Top notch.
Cheers mate 😊
Still doing great work!
Brilliant tutorial, I've just moved over to Davinci Resolve Studio from Adobe. And this tutorial is perfect, thank you. 👏 👏
You answered my question. I have the xrite photography passport and was wondering if it would work just the same. Your info is not what I wanted to hear, but thankful for the answer. Appreciate it.
Brilliant song Gary Barlow
Barlow is incredible!!!❤