UPDATED april 26 2010!
People have asked me to publish my EX1/EX3 profile settings i use for achieving a filmic look.
UPDATED APRIL 13th – ALL NEW PROFILE AFTER MANY MANY TEST SHOTS AND MEASUREMENTS. SEE THE JULY 6 UPDATE RE. BLACK LEVEL BELOW TOO.
I have spent many many hours adjusting and experimenting with these settings on both a pure technical ánd perceptual level. Using test charts, waveform monitor and a HD reference monitor, and my eyes…
The following settings are meant to mimic the film look.
Camera settings suggestions (only mentioning settings that differ from the default):
CAMERA SET MENU:
- Gain Setup: use -3/0/6 as defaults, preferably shooting with 0 where possible, -3 gives just 90IRE
- Shutter: Angle : 180 (this is the angle of a filmcamera’s shutter – given 25fps that comes to an exposure of 1/50th)
- Filcker Reduce: off
- TLCS: AGC limit: 12, AGC point: F/2.8, A.Sht point: F/5.6 (this all is limiting the iris aperture versus the automatic gain control, so we don’t get lower dan a F/5.6) – i personally use manual iris.
LCD/FV SET MENU:
- Marker: Aspect Select: 14:9
- Zebra: Zebra-1 level: 70 (our over-exposure early-warning-system for the caucasian skin), show both
OTHERS MENU:
- i.Link I/O: Enable
- Video Format: HQ 1080/24p or 1080/25p (NTSC or PAL)
Now… let’s get to the serious business. Nicely un-documented by Sony: the Picture Profile
MARVELS FILM PICTURE PROFILE, april 2010:
- 1920 x 1080, 24p
- Shutter 180 degrees
- Color Matrix: FL Light
- level 0
- phase 0
- R-G 0
- R-B 6
- G-R -7
- G-B +9
- B-R -16
- B-G -10
- Color correction: off
- Detail: On
- Level: -6
- Frequency: +50
- Crispening: +35
- H/V ratio: -5
- White limiter: 70
- Black limiter: 70
- V DTL creation: Y
- Knee apt level: 0
- Skin tone detail: off
- Gamma: Cine 1, level 0
- Black: -1
- Black gamma: -4
- Low key sat: -10
I use Cine 1 gamma almost exclusively because it’s clearly the most lownoise gamma. I sometimes use Cine 3 for exterior overcast sky or indoors when Cine 1 is too flat. I sometimes use Cine4 indoors, but i don’t like the lifting of the midrange, giving me trouble getting the skincolors right in post
Shooting tips:
- The EX1 and EX3 cameras show softening and color-fringing effects due to diffraction-effects in the iris, with lens apertures smaller than F5.6! So, please do not use F stops smaller than 5.6 by using the ND filter when shooting with bright light.
- If shooting with tungsten lighting, try using blue filters on the lights (don’t apply a 80-a/b filter to the lens – it will cost you 2 F-stops). This will result in lower amplification in the blue channel at time of white-balancing – that will significantly reduce the noise in shadows (blacks) .
- Switch off the image stabilizer
- Try to shoot on manual focus if you can; pull the focus-ring of the lens back towards you to click it into full manual focus mode.
- If you don’t own a Depth Of Field adapter, try to use a longer lens all the time, e.g. zoom in as much as possible and stand back… Shallower depth of field (characterstic of film and cinema lenses) can be achieved by using an aperture of max. F/4 (don’t go lower) and a minimal of 50mm. lens length. It’s just a suggestion, just play around with minimal aperture without Gain (even use ND filter to open the lens if it’s over F/4) and zooming in.
- You might want to consider buying a Depth Of Field adapter. I advise the Redrock Micro M2 Encore for best performance – the winner of all our lab-tests.
- Buy a nice matte box (Cokin has an affordable one, RedrockMicro a very good one) and some nice filters (e.g. grading filters are cool, giving dramatic look and/or detail to skies)
- Install a skyfilter (UV filter) on your lenses, for protection and for filtering that extra bit of UV that will get through the lens in very bright sun-lit conditions.
- Move the camera like a film camera! Avoid jerky or fast pans. Brusque movements will lead to flickering images – the 24 or 25 fps rolling shutter (simulation) will react just like a film camera would, if you jerk the camera from left to right: show flicker. Use smooth slow pans.
- One last tip for wannabe-film-cameramen: don’t zoom – film cameras usually don’t have zoomlenses! Move the camera, not the zoom. Make yourself a dolly, or even tracks – use a skateboard, whatever, but try to keep your hands off that zoom handle…
The EX-1 and EX-3 are great cameras, but – alas- they are not film cameras. Instead of the current 8-bit image processing, 10 bits would have made more sense in capturing a film look, e.g. the famous 10-stop dynamic range. Nevertheless, you have a great camera with unparalelled image quality for a below-10K-dollars camera. Adding a DOF adapter like the RedrockMicro M2 Encore improves the filmic quality by enableing the use of 35mm lenses (e.g. standard Nikon lenses) and thus achieving a shallower depth of field.
Cheers!
Martin Beek
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