Cameras were different back then, obviously. But even with the modern cameras the white looks a bit strange, It pops out so much it almost loses its definition around the edges. Same with the strings of your hoodie. TV Yellow looks more "normal." Definitely easier to see. Cool video man. Thanks!
Your using a modern filter. I watched an old 50s film on this. It washed the white out with the equipment and lighting they were using at the time. In so much that it carried over onto other objects blurring them out. Then I saw the tv yellow in the same original film and it looked white. With your filter, you can tell the tv yellow is yellow and the white is white. So yeah, not even close to a true test
Sorry, I lost my Flux Capacitor. Doing the best with what I have. I thought the white looked washed out and the TV Yellow looked more natural even in my POS video. Thanks for watching.
This is ridiculous. Firstly the FILM cameras did NOT have the dynamic range of exposure that modern digital cameras do. Know your facts first before making a video...
Sorry, I lost my Flux Capacitor. Doing the best with what I have. I thought the white looked washed out and the TV Yellow looked more natural even in my POS video. Thanks for watching. Reply
@ryanbailey112 TV yellow wasn't meant for FILM cameras. TV yellow was meant for STUDIO Television cameras. Early tv cameras used tubes. Bright spots or "hot spots" were too bright for the cameras, especially under studio lights. If you watch early tv shows, you may see a streak or tail if the camera was on a hot spot then moved. In fact if you left the camera on one bright spot for too long you would risk "burn in" in which the tube would be permanently damaged and retain that image. Kinda like if you look at something bright then quickly shut your eyes. And after a production, when cams were shut down, it was required to first throw them out of focus and point them to the floor. Oh yeah, guess I should've stated I worked in a television studio as a camera operator. So maybe know YOUR facts before commenting
Cameras were different back then, obviously. But even with the modern cameras the white looks a bit strange, It pops out so much it almost loses its definition around the edges. Same with the strings of your hoodie. TV Yellow looks more "normal." Definitely easier to see. Cool video man. Thanks!
Thank You for the positive feedback. The other two comments were very negative, but I thought it still got the point across as you said.
@ wait. You don’t have a 70 year old camera immediately available at your house to use for UA-cam?
Your using a modern filter. I watched an old 50s film on this. It washed the white out with the equipment and lighting they were using at the time. In so much that it carried over onto other objects blurring them out. Then I saw the tv yellow in the same original film and it looked white. With your filter, you can tell the tv yellow is yellow and the white is white. So yeah, not even close to a true test
Sorry, I lost my Flux Capacitor. Doing the best with what I have. I thought the white looked washed out and the TV Yellow looked more natural even in my POS video. Thanks for watching.
This is ridiculous. Firstly the FILM cameras did NOT have the dynamic range of exposure that modern digital cameras do. Know your facts first before making a video...
Sorry, I lost my Flux Capacitor. Doing the best with what I have. I thought the white looked washed out and the TV Yellow looked more natural even in my POS video. Thanks for watching.
Reply
@ryanbailey112 TV yellow wasn't meant for FILM cameras. TV yellow was meant for STUDIO Television cameras. Early tv cameras used tubes. Bright spots or "hot spots" were too bright for the cameras, especially under studio lights. If you watch early tv shows, you may see a streak or tail if the camera was on a hot spot then moved. In fact if you left the camera on one bright spot for too long you would risk "burn in" in which the tube would be permanently damaged and retain that image. Kinda like if you look at something bright then quickly shut your eyes. And after a production, when cams were shut down, it was required to first throw them out of focus and point them to the floor. Oh yeah, guess I should've stated I worked in a television studio as a camera operator. So maybe know YOUR facts before commenting