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thank you so much to all who have posted links and advice re making some colour corrections for video. I played around with a small clip while watching one of the recommended youtubers Daniel Batal and was hoping for some feedback. I've put the straight out of camera and two options; I've had people like both (and some prefer the original!) so it's interesting to hear what is pleasing to individual eyes. These are the first edits i've done and getting input on what works and what I need to consider should be very helpful as I learn. I was using a single Kraken light fwiw
Video link https://youtu.be/2jolHTw_9nI
Photo screen shot attached.

Again, thanks so much for any time and feedback you can offer :)

raytestcompare01.jpg

Hi Kristin and thanks for sharing this.

I think the graded version is on the right track, but I also see two technical problems in the footage itself:

- the white balance on the SOOC camera footage is a little off - basically it is too warm on the artificially-lit part, and this is causing issues in the grading because of the strong contrast with the ambient lit background (which has a major colour cast).
The foreground looks better on the graded version because you fixed the white-balance by removing the warm cast - but there shouldn't be a warm cast to begin with.
And this de-warming of the foreground in the graded version, by cooling the image, has increased the colour cast in the ambient light lit background...

- you're only using one light, meaning the foreground is a little underlit or rather not lit evenly, creating something of a hotspot to the left of the image.
A second light would help light it more evenly, and then you could focus on grading to the artificially lit area.

The main solutions in my opinion would be to choose to shoot in a full artificial light dominant scenario, but then you need a second light, and importantly to get the correct white-balance on the lights.

The other solution, since this seems quite shallow, would actually be to shoot without the light (ideally with a good filter), after locking the white balance (say to 5600K).
You could then rebalance the white-balance point of the image in Resolve and would get more even results between foreground and background I think.

Edited by bghazzal

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