I Paid a Stranger $6 to Color Grade My Movie - DaVinci Resolve 17

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  • Опубліковано 1 лип 2024
  • Check out the official trailer: • The Wraith Of Rustico ...
    Timestamps:
    Intro - 0:00
    Hiring the Colorists - 0:54
    Extra Details - 2:09
    6 Dollar Review - 2:35
    13 Dollar Review - 4:18
    26 Dollar Review - 6:00
    40 Dollar Review - 7:50
    Final Thoughts - 10:01
    Download Davinci Resolve for Free: www.blackmagicdesign.com/prod...
    Notes:
    I'm back! Been up to a ton of stuff, and this short film being released into the wild being one part of that. Thank y'all for the incredible support that keeps me coming back to make videos.
    The big takeaway I want from this video is to encourage people to value their time and charge a fair wage for their services. The race to the bottom doesn't really help anyone. The other takeaway is to maybe get folks to consider the skills they should have before starting to work with and charge clients for post production services. My advice is to pick up the program, take Black magic's courses, really study the manual and learn how things actually work in the program. Start working with free clips and then see if you have some friends who've shot something that you can grade. Reach out to filmmaking forums and explain your situation and how you're looking for experience right now, music videos, short films, documentaries, if you're able to get compensated a bit that's great but right now you're learning and bolstering your resume. Then after you've practiced a couple years, gotten some experience and have a reel put together of work you've been hired to do (not free/tutorial clips) then I'd say really put yourself out there and consult with any professionals in your filed and location their rates so you can make informed decisions.
    Check out the DaVinci Resolve 17 reference manual to learn more you can find it in the help tab of Resolve.
    Gear I use:
    Camera - Black Magic Pocket 4k
    Microphone - Rode NTK
    Main Lens - Meike 12mm f2.8
    Other lenses - Meike 35 mm f1.7, Rokinon 50mm T1.5, Rokinon 24mm T1.5
    Tripod - Velbon Videomate 638
    Computer Specs:
    CPU - Ryzen 1700x
    GPU - GTX 1070
    Monitor - Eizo CG2420
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 21

  • @NathanCarterVids
    @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому

    Hey everyone, I really appreciate the feedback. I honestly believe given the price points that everyone in this video did a good job, and considering I was essentially viewing first drafts. We're all at different stages of learning.

  • @R3fug333
    @R3fug333 2 роки тому

    Dude that is so cool that you're making a movie. It's awesome and I'm happy to say I knew you when you were making a podcast with Kevin back in the day. So proud of you, man. You're killing it!

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому +1

      That means so much to me. I hope you're well man. It's crazy actually Kevin and I live in totally different parts of the country now for the past couple years. Just last month though I came back home to get married and he was the best man at my wedding. Life's going well on my end and crazy enough I really got started down this path from those podcasts like 6 years ago and your support was a huge encouragement for me to branch out and get into video work professionally.

    • @R3fug333
      @R3fug333 2 роки тому

      @@NathanCarterVids So glad to hear that, man! I can't say how happy I am for you. It's so awesome to see everything you're doing and knowing that not only are you doing great, but in this crazy time, you're doing so well. I want to see a lot more success in your future. When one of your movies gets released here in Australia, I'm gonna be pointing at the credits saying "I know that man."
      Extremely happy for you man.

  • @filmstockreel
    @filmstockreel 2 роки тому

    Hey Nathan love the concept of the video and given that these were first drafts and how much they charged I can see it's worth the money you paid for it. Some of the mistakes are wild tho. XML imports and renders that's color assisting 101.

  • @finalresult3d
    @finalresult3d 2 роки тому

    The part where the dude chases her throws me off. She turns and runs toward an open highway, then boom. She is in the woods running towards a cabin. Other than that, it was good.

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому

      This is a trailer. So those two moments are entirely different scenes in the film.

  • @kingshuk1990
    @kingshuk1990 2 роки тому

    can you share the Droppbox Link ?

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому

      I'll get back to you on that, the short was funded through a program that has a number of regulations. So it may actually be a while until I'm able to do that, but that would be awesome.

  • @powerwizard007
    @powerwizard007 2 роки тому

    crazy, I'm just learning to edit. Of course i learn from you some and other utube channels .I would try it for free.

  • @JimRobinson-colors
    @JimRobinson-colors 2 роки тому +1

    Did you pay them in Canadian dollars? Not sure anyone gets what they pay for in color grading. Don't know about others but paying very little and getting very little, it is not a fair trade if you make a movie. I guess that was the point. I think you could have wrapped this into a tutorial of showing how it should be done. Entertaining though.

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому

      I think I'm going to make a video along the lines of "all the things you need to know before client work" teaching the basics, like XML importing, reference checking, basic shot matching, etc. Also yes, all payment was in CAD.

  • @kingshuk1990
    @kingshuk1990 2 роки тому

    all are not color matched

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому

      Yeah, in a few places though I can see there were attempts at matching luminance. For the price points though I completely understand color matching being off the table.

  • @tomasgomez1906
    @tomasgomez1906 2 роки тому

    Damn those were all terrible to be honest hahah

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому +2

      I feel like the biggest issue was they felt like they had to rush cause they were all charging so little. So they didn't have time to even review their renders.

  • @mkmartin559
    @mkmartin559 2 роки тому

    I understand keys to UA-cam success, with attention grabbing headlines -- and I don't begrudge you working for success. But you know that you paid someone an unfair wage to do a project; THAT should stick with you. Regardless of their skill level, or whether we're criticizing your criticism of them... this grabs UA-cam views for you and further demeans someone who's trying to eke out a living on less-than-subsistence pay. I've been subscribed to you for a while, and watched all your videos, but this will be my last visit to your channel.

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому +1

      That's totally fair and I appreciate the feedback. The main take away from this video was supposed to be "don't under value yourself, and charge what you're worth" but I clearly missed the mark. The race to the bottom is a problem, but probably best to leave someone else to tackle that going forward. I appreciate the honest feedback

    • @mkmartin559
      @mkmartin559 2 роки тому

      @@NathanCarterVids you know what... that was a mature and well-considered reply, which I appreciate. Just for that: re-subscribing.

    • @NathanCarterVids
      @NathanCarterVids  2 роки тому +1

      @@mkmartin559 thanks that really means a lot. Do you have anything you'd wanna see me cover in a future tutorial?

    • @mkmartin559
      @mkmartin559 2 роки тому

      @@NathanCarterVids I watch you & realize, "I didn't even KNOW that I needed to know (x thing)!"
      That said, off top of head I'd like to learn:
      1) How to deal subtly with shine on balding heads/faces and reflections in glasses caused by poor/harsh lighting. Maybe best vs fastest solutions, since I'm betting they're not the same.
      2) Best workflow for toning down flushed, florid Caucasian skin tones (faces). Especially without messing up whatever's near that skin, like hairlines or background. Especially in older male subjects.
      And for both of those: What NOT to do, how to avoid rookie mistakes that make the work look obvious.
      As an amateur, I don't film most of the informal footage that's handed to me, So I usually can't fix it at the source. I run into these 2 issues consistently w/ corporate clientele. Subtle, quick fixes would REALLY help; I've searched but not found any great tutorials on these 2 problems.