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Thursday Oct 02, 2008
 

Do it yourself Color Grading

Color Grading is too often regarded as an arcane, exclusive science not fit for mere mortals. But the digital age is slowly starting to reshape this mentality and allow for a clearer perspective through the haze of hyperbole. Which is a good thing because the tools for getting great color grading results have never been better, cheaper or more accessible.

Any cinematic art can be complex, nuanced, detailed, scientific and specialized - editing, sound mixing, cinematography - but simply because these arts can be highly specialized shouldn't mean you have to be a Specialist to engage with them; they shouldn't be inaccessible or unapproachable.

Contrary to popular belief, Color Grading isn't that hard. It is nether arcane nor unassailable. You CAN color grade your own digital movie and get good results. You CAN color grade on a desktop computer without dedicated hardware. Anyone who tells you otherwise is simply out of touch or a technology snob.

Of course a colorist specialist in a dedicated hardware grading suite with specialized and carefully calibrated monitors will likely get better results than you at your desktop or laptop. But that's absolutely not the point. If we all followed that logic no one would dare pick up a camera until they had been properly apprenticed on a 35mm Panavision; No one would sit down to edit until they had been well schooled on every element of an Avid Symphony; No one would drive a car on the road until they had mastered an F1 racer. Utterly absurd! That is an archaic and dinosauric perspective generally expounded by those terrified that the Digital Generation of filmmakers may show them up with the brazen audacity of their DIY ethic.

It strikes me as somewhat odd that very few would rally against the idea of the DIY when it comes to camera, sound and edit but for reasons unknown there remains an entrenched idea that doing your own color grade is somehow blasphemy and folly.

If you're careful, follow some key principles of color theory, ensure your grading is in-concert with your film's story and theme, understand how to avoid clipping and illegal colors, and have even a half-decent set of eyeballs in your head then there is absolutely no reason whatsoever that you can't get great color grading results on your own, doing it yourself, using low cost software on a domestic computer.

Read the rest of this article in 2 parts HERE and HERE.


Comments:

Very nice posts, right on! Anyone who would like to dig further into color correction (swallow the red pill and see how far the rabbit hole goes), just buy Steve Hullfish's approachable, no-nonsense book "The Art and Technique of Digital Color Correction". Immensely interesting and a splendid read which I enjoyed very much.

Posted by Stephan on October 03, 2008 at 06:15 AM EST #

Thanks Stephan. You are dead right about Steve Hulfish's book. Its superb. A great grounding in colour and very accessible.

Thanks for reading.

Mike

Posted by Mike Jones on October 03, 2008 at 08:49 AM EST #

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