Jeff Yin
August 28th, 2007, 07:35 PM
Let me preface this post with a broad disclaimer: User error is the single most likely source of these problems. That being said, I've run across a few unwanted visual effects in some of the test footage I've shot.
I was using the 5296 preset found in the sticky thread above, and the standard gain settings (though I didn't mess with the gain, so it should be at the lowest of the standard settings). Also, I was shooting in 24f. My fstop, zoom, and shutter speed changed from time to time, as I was experimenting with different settings.
When shooting inside, even during the day with bright sunlight, I seem to be getting a grainy image. I've searched on the forums and I've seen people suggest changing the gain settings to 0 or even -3db. Can anyone comment on whether that actually reduces gain? If it does, what do you give up and how do you compensate for it?
When shooting outside, I notice some pixelation, particularly on the borders of strongly contrasting colors, like a black shirt on a white person. Is this normal? If not, what can I do to correct it?
Finally, my footage looks much worse on an HD tv than a SD one. I assume that's because the HD TV is able to more accurately display my incompetence than an SD one. What settings concerns do you have to keep in mind specifically for HD?
Thanks!
I was using the 5296 preset found in the sticky thread above, and the standard gain settings (though I didn't mess with the gain, so it should be at the lowest of the standard settings). Also, I was shooting in 24f. My fstop, zoom, and shutter speed changed from time to time, as I was experimenting with different settings.
When shooting inside, even during the day with bright sunlight, I seem to be getting a grainy image. I've searched on the forums and I've seen people suggest changing the gain settings to 0 or even -3db. Can anyone comment on whether that actually reduces gain? If it does, what do you give up and how do you compensate for it?
When shooting outside, I notice some pixelation, particularly on the borders of strongly contrasting colors, like a black shirt on a white person. Is this normal? If not, what can I do to correct it?
Finally, my footage looks much worse on an HD tv than a SD one. I assume that's because the HD TV is able to more accurately display my incompetence than an SD one. What settings concerns do you have to keep in mind specifically for HD?
Thanks!