This is really well done, EXCEPT for the pace. Yes, we can go back and watch again, but if you slow down a bit and use more examples of each case point, I think you'll have a better end result. You cover a lot in a short period of time, which I think a lot of us appreciate, but perhaps sub-videos on each topic would also be useful. Either way, cheers! Great video, you've earned a sub!
Thank you for the honest feedback. Highly appreciated. I'm being honest, the tempo is the one thing I am struggling the most with as I am recording. So it's good someone points it out. I'll try to work on that. Thanks so much man!
Hey yes this is a really top notch tutorial >> thank you for the in depth information as to why it is best to keep things simple when shot matching >> I didn't know that about the 'S' curve vs Linear approach >> perfect thank you 👌💯🎥😎🌟
Wow, I love these type of videos!! Thank you for explaining once again perfectly! My question is: why should I work with logarithmic offsets ( apart from acescc ) if the linear gain simulates light behavior and it's really precise?
Thanks so much. One simple answer: Simplicity. Setting up linear node gamma or creating a CST sandwich takes time. Understanding that Offset in log is 99% the same thing speeds up operations. Great question actually! Also btw, sometimes log offset (because of the inaccurate behavior in the blacks) creates just the right crunch in the blacks. It's all about knowing your tools and using them efficiently.
@@NOIRGRADE Thank so much for your clarification and for the quick tip!! I will try to use the offset more for create deepest blacks look if it’s what you were referring to!! Have a great day
Great, very satisfying info. Just what I was looking for. Subscribed.
Thanks for the support!
Now this is the real Channel...what i was looking for...Thank u
I think the same.
Love the deeper dive, focused on How and WHY tools act the way they do. For us engineering types, this info is necessary for sanity.
Thanks a lot!
Deliciously complicated!
This is really well done, EXCEPT for the pace. Yes, we can go back and watch again, but if you slow down a bit and use more examples of each case point, I think you'll have a better end result. You cover a lot in a short period of time, which I think a lot of us appreciate, but perhaps sub-videos on each topic would also be useful. Either way, cheers! Great video, you've earned a sub!
Thank you for the honest feedback. Highly appreciated. I'm being honest, the tempo is the one thing I am struggling the most with as I am recording. So it's good someone points it out. I'll try to work on that. Thanks so much man!
@@NOIRGRADE keep up the great work!
I really liked the little animated graph inserts! Very helpful visualizations and they looked like the actual math went in there. Geil alter!
Thanks for the kind words. Appreciate it!
@@NOIRGRADE Nah, thanks for the great explanation!
Top Video
Sehr schön erklärt
Merci :)
Hey yes this is a really top notch tutorial >> thank you for the in depth information as to why it is best to keep things simple when shot matching >> I didn't know that about the 'S' curve vs Linear approach >> perfect thank you 👌💯🎥😎🌟
Thanks for the kind words!
Wow, I love these type of videos!! Thank you for explaining once again perfectly! My question is: why should I work with logarithmic offsets ( apart from acescc ) if the linear gain simulates light behavior and it's really precise?
Thanks so much. One simple answer: Simplicity. Setting up linear node gamma or creating a CST sandwich takes time. Understanding that Offset in log is 99% the same thing speeds up operations. Great question actually! Also btw, sometimes log offset (because of the inaccurate behavior in the blacks) creates just the right crunch in the blacks. It's all about knowing your tools and using them efficiently.
@@NOIRGRADE Thank so much for your clarification and for the quick tip!! I will try to use the offset more for create deepest blacks look if it’s what you were referring to!! Have a great day
great content my friend!
Thank you!
Great tut and content! Subbed. How do you apply scurve from the contrast slider on 3:09 ? Shift drag or? Never thought about it
Thanks. I temporarily enabled the S-Curve contrast in the project settings again (contrary to what I did at 0:34). I should've shown that.
@@NOIRGRADE ah okay noted, had it disabled since the beggiing for all projects by default with copy paste prepared project hah. Thank you