Cairo Shorts: Tech Thoughts and Color Grades

I can’t really think of anything to prep this with so here’s some random thoughts on the Cairo post-production.

  • Si-2K/Cineform workflow was really easy. The network connection freaked a couple times to the Cinedeck so the clip didn’t close out properly, but SI has a utility to fix that so no issues
  • You need a really good lens for the SI. Nobody’d really tried what I was doing so there was no information on the EF mount for it. I took a risk and it didn’t work out so in a pinch I used primarily the Sigma 10-20…it was all I could get my hands on. It wasn’t good…obviously.
  • The Ziess 50mm is really soft. I ran it F/1.8 but it didn’t sharpen up until around 2.2 or so. Back focus issue? I don’t know anything about that. The images weren’t as sharp as I wanted.
  • The SI/Cinedeck Extreme color was dead on accurate to reality.
  • The T2i color, even with the profile set way down was harsh, forced and well, colored improperly.
  • 10 bit is the way to go. I don’t care how awesome your 8 bit camera is; 8 bit sucks balls in post. Not to mention you have banding and absolutely no gradients (comparatively speaking). Budget might keep you at 8 bit though and that’s understandable.
  • I’m really bummed I don’t own the SI2K/Cinedeck combo. Financially it doesn’t make sense right now although I’d use it for absolutely everything.

…and speaking of color. Here’s a selection of before/afters on the first Cairo short:

Sayid_Samp1

Sayid_Samp3

Sayid_Samp4

Sayid_Samp5

Sayid_Samp6

Sayid_Samp7

Sayid_Samp8

Tags: , , , , , ,

Video: The Power of One: Needs of the People

This is the first in a three film series on graduates of the Evangelical Theological Seminary of Cairo. Red Futon Films partnered with Overseas Council to produce these as part of an effort to promote and raise awareness for student scholarships online and at events around the world.

This was shot over a two day period in June with the Si-2K Mini tethered to a Cinedeck Extreme and a Canon T2i. The following lenses were used: Canon 17-55mm f/2.8; Zeiss 50mm f/1.4; Canon 70-200mm f/2.8; Sigma 10-20mm f/3.5.

Post was done in three days. Edited in Premiere Pro CS5, visual post in After Effects CS5 using Color Finesse, Optical Flares, and Twitch. The final Cineform master was given a looks pass in First Light before distribution copies were made. Audio post in Nuendo 4. Music from the Free Music Archive.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

SI/Cinedeck Workflow and Tips

Let’s talk workflow for a second on using this Cindeck. The entire system runs on Windows and the Cineform .MOV files record to NTFS formatted SSD drives. I work on a Mac. So here’s what I do:

Drag files from SSD to CalDigit VR Mini via e-SATA.
Plug the CalDigit into my Mac and start editing.

Yes, that easy. When I get home, I’ll transfer the files to a Mac-writable drive, but for now that’s it. I run Parallels on my machine as well so when I offload the SDHC cards from the T2i, I just pull them from my OS finder over to the appropriate folder open in Windows Explorer.

Parallels will only boot from USB, so I use FW to power the drive, and USB to boot the drive. When I’m done in Windows, I unplug the USB and the drive loads in OSX.

Now this next point is probably for all of us using this combo like, ah, me and Danny Boyle. The overheating issue I had was due to the fan dropping RPMs when I hit record (and hot stinkin’ Cairo temps mid day in the sun). The fan is controlled by the SI software and will override any existing fan control software (like Speed Fan)- at least this is what I discovered. The remedy:

The SI software includes a prefs.xml file. In there about 1/3 of the way down, you’ll find a FanSpeed preference with a value set to either 0, 1, or 2.

0 = high RPM all the time
1= high RPM when not recording, low RPM when recording
2= low RPM all the time

So simply reset the value to what you desire and save the file. Incidentally, this little snafu helped the guys at Cinedeck discover a problem with one of the inputs on the power board (there are 2 which is how I got mine working- I swapped inputs) so they’re remedying that in all models that go out from this point forward. (This is a good time to plug issue/error reporting even if you’re not on any Betas and if you are, then you should be smacked if you’re not reporting regularly).

The second problem I had was the SI software not recognizing the 2K Mini sensor when I received it. If, for some random reason, you happen to receive this set up in a way other than HD Camera Rentals and it doesn’t connect up right away, it’s your NIC settings. To fix this you’ll want to access the Binaries folder in the main SI software folder. Inside you’ll see find the EBDriverTool.exe file (or something like that). Run that and change the settings to GigE on the appropriate port. This information is also on the bottom of page 12 of the installation manual (section 2.4.2).

One final tip to controlling temps: if you carry yours in a bag or pack while using it, like I’ve been doing and it’s wicked warm out, throw in some frozen water bottles. It’ll keep the box much cooler and if it’s that hot, you can drink ‘em when they start melting away.

How do I feel about this combo? Well, the camera’s the size of a lunch pail juice box, the Cinedeck replaces 4 different things and I can stand out of the way in a hall, stick the camera through the window and grab all sorts of funky angles while monitoring without contorting myself into all sorts of painful positions. I can’t do that on even on the DLSR. This combo rocks.

How do I feel about the Cinedeck? I love it. I was running around all day in villages, rooms, stairs, buildings, hallways, around corners, inside windows, cars and churches and about everywhere else you could think of. It held up and it held up well (like it should). I would shoot an entire doc solo on this box any day- camera of choice. A studio situation would be an even greater no-brainer. The monitor, histograms, focus checks, color previews and guide overlays at the touch of a button (literally) are about as nice as it gets. All in one sweet little package.

www.cinedeck.com

Tags: , , ,

© 2010 Jay Friesen's Blog. All Rights Reserved.

This blog is powered by Wordpress and Magatheme by Bryan Helmig. A blog about international non-profit HD media and film production and the lifestyle that goes with it.