Kappa Studios, Inc. is proud to host the 2nd meeting of
RED Los Angeles User Group
May 10, 2008
9:00 - 12:00 noon
For directions, more information and to register please visit:
http://www.kappastudios.com/?page_id=21
Come and join your friends at the 2nd RED Los Angeles User Group meeting...
The steep learning curve has to do with the fact that RED is a bit harder to use then a typical HD video camera. The benefits are many, as described above.
If you think of it as a film camera and you crew the camera department the same way (there is no loader but you have a data wrangler or a...
There are even online editing web sites. The set of features is limited and the quality is not the best but at least you can try it out without further investment. Check out this one: http://jumpcut.com/
I think it's good to have even a crappy, poor quality video camera just so you may shoot stuff. You may never use the material in an edited piece. The idea would be just to shoot, to rack up some hours looking through the viewfinder. It's a good practice for composition and bunch of other stuff.
Certainly, but this may produce unwanted temporal artifacts. If you can go back and retime, rerender animation, that would be the best choice.
If you can't try using a good quality retiming plugin like Twixtor.
Desaturate color, reduce luma gamma and increase luma contrast. There may even be some plugins for this but you can get very good results with color correction tools alone. HDV is heavily compressed so you may start seeing encoding artifacts.
There are. Steven Soderbergh's "Guerilla" and "The Argentine" were shot with RED and he is working on the third film. I just watched some scenes from the two films the other day on a 2k/4k projector and the material looks very good.
I'm working on the post for a documentary project shot with...
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