Peter Moretti
August 19th, 2007, 12:09 AM
To get the best picture, camera gain should be set to zero.
Except light changes. E.g., I'm shooting B-Roll from out my car window. Lighting will change depending on the street I go down, trees providing intermittent shade, etc.
So if I lock gain, shutter and iris, then I'm stuck stuck being under and/or over exposed sometimes. (I guess the camera could have an automatic ND filter that could fix this problem, but I'm not sure.)
So the questions are:
1. How bad is it to allow the camer to add a little gain?
2. Should I set up with negative gain (negative gain seems pretty harmless, right?) and hope the camera never compensates so much that it goes into positive gain?
3. Do I just lock the exposure completely and "fix it in post?" My problem with fixing in post is that I come from a still photography film background and was taught "Do as much processing INSIDE the camera as you can." Is Sony Vegas or Avid Xpress Pro really going do a better job lighten my footage than the camera would by turning up the gain? At best, won't they essentially do the same thing?
Enough newbie rambling on my part, please FEEL FREE to answer any or all of these questions. Oh, BTW, the camera will be an HV-20, but the possibility exists to add an XH-A1 down the line.
THANKS MUCH as always.
Except light changes. E.g., I'm shooting B-Roll from out my car window. Lighting will change depending on the street I go down, trees providing intermittent shade, etc.
So if I lock gain, shutter and iris, then I'm stuck stuck being under and/or over exposed sometimes. (I guess the camera could have an automatic ND filter that could fix this problem, but I'm not sure.)
So the questions are:
1. How bad is it to allow the camer to add a little gain?
2. Should I set up with negative gain (negative gain seems pretty harmless, right?) and hope the camera never compensates so much that it goes into positive gain?
3. Do I just lock the exposure completely and "fix it in post?" My problem with fixing in post is that I come from a still photography film background and was taught "Do as much processing INSIDE the camera as you can." Is Sony Vegas or Avid Xpress Pro really going do a better job lighten my footage than the camera would by turning up the gain? At best, won't they essentially do the same thing?
Enough newbie rambling on my part, please FEEL FREE to answer any or all of these questions. Oh, BTW, the camera will be an HV-20, but the possibility exists to add an XH-A1 down the line.
THANKS MUCH as always.