DSC Labs CamAlign ChromaDuMonde Chart Review by Nino Del Padre

DSC Labs CamAlign ChromaDuMonde Chart

Set Consistent Looks and Match Your Cameras As You Shoot Source: Studio Monthly

Modern cameras make great pictures right out of the box, right? That's often true, but accurate alignment to a precision Color Calibration Chart is essential to achieve a consistent "look" and quality standard.

In our professional life as videoraphers and filmmakers, we need to be able to agree on color. To do this we need a point of reference and to have a series of colors laid out in a consistent fashion to be able to determine colors and assign a name and value to a representation of that color. In the business of creating images, color is everything.

Making grading decisions with the naked eye is risky business, requiring both a perfectly calibrated monitor and the proverbial golden eyeball. This should rule out eye-balling color correction and scene-to-scene matching on your laptop. However, with a DSC chart, and color and waveform data to complement your NLE, you can make intelligent grading decisions even on a laptop.

Using a Color Calibration Chart also helps you make a number of other time-saving choices, including the following.

Matching Multiple Cameras
Camera matching becomes impossible without an accurate test pattern or analytical tools. No two cameras are identical, which makes it unreliable to upload the settings from one camera to another. The only way to match cameras effectively is to adjust the matrix settings of each camera using the same precision test chart under the identical lighting condition.

Adjusting Cameras During Production
Check and adjust cameras on the fly, and immediately see the effect of any hue changes on surrounding colors. When producing greenscreen and other digital special effects, Color Calibration charts provide precise information about how camera hue adjustments are affecting the full gamut of color reproduction. Image quality and consistency can be enhanced by recording chart information to tape or film, and using it in post as a baseline production reference. For scene-to-scene consistency, record a few chart frames with every lighting change. You'll expedite any color-correcting, matching footage, and digital/special effects you need to do in post.

Keep in mind that every time you recalibrate or re-time your shot in post, you're decreasing your signal's inherent quality. You're throwing away data that it needs. Today's DPs and digital/special effects technicians increasingly view DSC charts as necessities for optimizing their high performance cameras, and the production value of their images.

I had the pleasure of testing DSC Labs CamAlign CDM 28R Chroma DuMonde Color Calibration Chart, the latest addition to DSC's family of production-friendly CamAligns. These are high-performance charts with at least 12 precise colors and are made to the latest SMPTE 274M international colorimetry. Whether used in production or in post, these charts generate precise hexagonal-shaped displays for HD, SD and NTSC television images.

While every DP has his/her own technique for aligning a camera, they will typically use the procedure I tested. Testing with a Panasonic AG-AF100, I focused and framed it on the evenly lit CamAlign CDM 28R. I set the Iris mid-scale; the exposure/iris is adjusted to set the white chip of the DSC grayscale to 700mv. You should also check the tracking of RGB channels to ensure neutral reproduction across the grayscale. White and black balances are then set. Because all DSC colors combine to produce a neutral color balance, most cameras will white balance on a DSC color chart as accurately as it will on a TrueWhite card.

The Chart I was sent included pattern with the DSC Labs Cavity Black, for the ultimate black reference tool. Attached to the back of any CDM pattern, the CaviBlack folds out for use and then folds flat for convenient storage.

The charts from DSC Labs are manufactured to stringent color fidelity standards. Sometimes only one in 16 charts they print meet the rigid technical specifications they set for color. The narrow tolerances of DSC charts give users a higher level of confidence in knowing that placing color signals in the boxes should result in accurate color reproduction.

Recording a few seconds of a DSC test pattern on the set, at the head or tail of a scene, captures virtually everything a colorist needs to know to color correct or match scenes. Secondary colors from a DSC ChromaDuMonde pattern are especially useful when shot on set as they enable changes in lighting or exposure to be corrected in post with speed and efficiency.

In my opinion, CamAlign is the perfect accessory for the serious videographer. Careful adherence to a common set of calibrated references is critical for maintaining image quality on any HD project.

 

Panasonic AG-AF100 Camcorder Review by Nino Del Padre

Panasonic AG-AF100 Camcorder

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ever since the introduction of the modern day video camera, digital filmmakers and producers of every genre have been striving for that elusive "film look." The advent of affordable high-definition camcorders like the Panasonic HVX200, with its cinema gamma and 24p recording, has brought us much closer to this. But no matter how good the lighting, composition and subjects are, one thing screams video from a mile away: the lack of cinema-style, shallow depth of field.

DOF, for the neophyte, is a distance range in which objects appear to be in focus. Deep DOF means more of the scene will appear in focus, shallow DOF means the range will be smaller and objects closer or further will appear blurred. Also known as selective focus, it’s artfully used by DPs to naturally draw the viewers’ attentions to the primary subject.

Here at Del Padre Digital, we have had great film-like results in the past with our Redrock M2 Cinema Lens Adapter mounted on our Panasonic HVX200 and, more recently, the RED ONE. In 2009 Canon released the 5D Mark II, primarily a digital SLR still camera, but also with the ability to capture 1080p HD video. This was the first affordable camera capable of mounting still camera lenses with an adapter. With its larger 35mm-sized CMOS sensor, the 5D offered groundbreaking control of depth of field.

Canon enjoyed—and still enjoys—tremendous success with the 5D, launching a huge DSLR video revolution. The one major drawback: the cameras were designed primarily as still cameras and are thus much more difficult to control ergonomically compared to already existing camcorders in terms of operation, handling and monitoring. You need to purchase so many extra accessories just to make it feel more like a video camera.

From lens adapters for cameras like the HVX200 to the pricey and rather large and heavy RED ONE there has been a need for 35mm-like depth of field in the form factor of a traditional video camera that accepts 35mm still or PL mount lenses. And if it’s going to sell, it’s got to be priced like an HDSLR.

 

This Loaded HD Camcorder Gives You 35mm-like DOF for the Price of an HDSLR—Without Rolling Shutter or Moiré.

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