The Books You Bought Me

Every time you click on a book on this site and buy it from Amazon, I get a few cents. Enough of you have been doing this lately that those cents added up to a few bucks, and I went a-shoppin! So a heartfelt thanks, and here's a peek at what y'all bought me!

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First up is an amazing book called If It's Purple, Someone's Gonna Die by Patti Bellantoni. This book is an inspirational dissertation on the symbolic use of color in film, drawing examples from movies like Gattaca, American Beauty, and The Wizard of Oz. I love this stuff. Bellantoni will give you a new appreciation of some of some of your favorite films, and remind you that the theme of your story holds a correct answer to any question about what color something should be.

Next is a book the scope of which I am still struggling to comprehend. It's called Behind the Seen, and it discusses how Walter Murch famously edited Cold Mountain using Final Cut Pro. But "discusses" doesn't cover it. This book uses interviews, anectodes, Murch's diary entries, photos, screen captures, and Viking ballads to provide a glimpse into the heart of a filmmaking effort that is beyond comprehensive. Did you necessarly need to know the sordid history of the production's agonizing decision to postpone upgrading from OS 9 to OS X? Probably not. But firsthand accounts of an industry pro struggling to nudge a megalithic software devloper to greatness ring errily true to me, and when you see how Murch reminds himself visually that his edits will be viewed on a thirteen foot tall screen, you will feel the depth of this book.

Of course, I'm just assuming that you already have Murch's seminal In the Blink of an Eye, but if you don't, please alleviate that situation immediatly, as I have done by adding it to the list at the right.

Three Way Color Corrector in After Effects

After Effects has been dinged over the years for lacking a classic “three-way” color correction tool, like the one found in Discreet products and just about every Non Linear Editor out there. But could it be that AE has actually had one for years, sans the sexy color-wheel UI?

In the Adjust category, there’s an oft-neglected effect called Color Balance. You’ve probably neglected it because its UI is just an unfriendly pile of sliders.

But if you tie those sliders to some Color Control effects using expressions, you can create a visual way to drive Color Balance’s quite decent color correction engine.

Download 3WayCB_01.ffx (4kb .zip file, requires After Effects 6.5)

You create your correction by dialing colors into the Master, Shadow, Midtone and Highlight swatches. If you select the “B” (of HSB) mode in the Adobe Color Picker, you are presented with a sort of “unwrapped” color wheel. If you’re on a Mac, you can elect to use the Apple color picker, which actually sports a color wheel. Either way, you can ignore the brightness of your color selection. The strength of your tinting will come from the saturation of the color.

If you want a solution that doesn't involve a modal dialog, use PowerPicker instead of the Color Control effects. Then you can pick colors right in the Effects Control Window, and get realtime feedback as you scrub your selection.

It ain’t the Discreet Color Corrector, but it ain’t half bad either. Give it a whirl and let us know what you think!

Comparotron2000™:

Log is the New Lin

This the the Kodak DLAD image (Marcie) in log space, right?

This is the same image, linearized.

Right?

Wrong, on both counts.

There are many misconceptions about Cineon files and the color spaces known colloquially as log and linear. The first is that Cineon files are stored in a log color space. It’s not that this is entirely false, it’s just that it’s not that simple. The pixel values in a Cineon file are represent dye densities on color negative film, and the relationships of these density measurements from one step to the next on the 10-bit scale are the same.

So while we say all the time that the Marcie Cineon file is “log,” what we really mean is that it is in Kodak's Cineon 10-bit encoding of negative densities as seen by the print stock. OK, so maybe I was being over dramatic when I said you were wrong earlier. That’s cool—let’s keep using the term log to describe Cineons, since the densities themselves are in fact logarithmic.

The problem is really with the second image. Many people freely use the term linear to describe images that look correct on their ≈g2.2 monitors. It’s particularly easy to fall into this trap when you are invited by your software to perform a “Log to Linear” conversion on a Cineon file. The standard practice is to use a Cineon conversion gamma equivalent to your monitor gamma and describe the results as linearized. But in truth, the results are gamma-encoded, as any image must be to look correct on a ≈g2.2 display, and are therefor not linear in the least.

As you can see here, a log curve and the gamma 2.2 curve are actually very similar. Gamma 2.2 images (which likely comprise the vast majority of digital images) actually bear more in common with log images than with linear ones. Logarithmic encoding and gamma encoding are both methods of distributing values perceptually, allowing them to be stored at reduced bit depths and to look correct on non-linear displays.

So it would be better to say that we converted the “log” Marcie above to “another kind of log-ish space” than to say that we made her linear. The eLin/ProLost/brave new future term wold be not log, not lin, but vid (like we talked about here).

“But Marcie looks all washed out in the log image and not in the second one (that I still desperately want to call linear).”

OK, I knew you were going to say that. Check this out. Here’s the log Marcie with all the values below 95 and above 685 clipped. Other than that, no color space change:

She's still “log” — all we've done is perform the clipping that happens in a standard Cineon conversion. Looks pretty darn similar to the second image at the top of the article, right?

So log Marcie is more like vid Marcie than linear Marcie. Linear Marcie is too dark to look at, but is the best Marcie for doing image processing operations on. Raw Cineon files look washed out because they contain so much headroom, not because they're log.

So repeat after me: Log is kinda like vid, and vid is not linear!