Ted Bragg
February 18th, 2008, 05:21 PM
We have stage lights set too bright, and no way to adjust them (the lighting co. didn't install dimmers!) Right now it looks terrible, like a bunch of yard lights shining down onto the stage.
I do everything I can to minimize blowouts, flares and the like, but no matter what I set iris, shutter, gain, etc. it looks terrible.
I heard somewhere that certain filters can 'expand dynamic range' of highlights, by white-balancing through a magenta or green gel.
You can see an example of my situation here:
mms://208.109.210.16/nccvideowin/ncc-02032008.wmv
We're trying to get the lights moved back 15' away from the stage, and somehow dim the lights a bit, without blacking out shadows...
I'm pulling my hair out -- it's either too hot, or nothing onscreen. Until we can fix the lighting, will filters help?
BTW, the video is shot on XL1's, fed via s-video to a Videonics MX100 switcher, and recorded onto a DVD recorder deck. Then I run it through WME for web...so it's been compressed a bit...
I do everything I can to minimize blowouts, flares and the like, but no matter what I set iris, shutter, gain, etc. it looks terrible.
I heard somewhere that certain filters can 'expand dynamic range' of highlights, by white-balancing through a magenta or green gel.
You can see an example of my situation here:
mms://208.109.210.16/nccvideowin/ncc-02032008.wmv
We're trying to get the lights moved back 15' away from the stage, and somehow dim the lights a bit, without blacking out shadows...
I'm pulling my hair out -- it's either too hot, or nothing onscreen. Until we can fix the lighting, will filters help?
BTW, the video is shot on XL1's, fed via s-video to a Videonics MX100 switcher, and recorded onto a DVD recorder deck. Then I run it through WME for web...so it's been compressed a bit...