Adam Gold
March 5th, 2008, 09:40 PM
So this is probably a stupid question: we're doing a four-cam multicam edit in Premiere with Aspect. As much as we tried in the theatre, the cams don't really match, color-wise and exposure-wise.
To do a multicam edit in Premiere, you essentially use your "raw" tape as the basis for a multicam sequence; you nest the four stacked original streams into a new sequence. Our original footage for each act of the play is an hour x 4 cams.
So it seems to me that there are two or three ways to color-correct to match the cameras: either render each edited multicam sequence into a single CFHD-AVI and apply color correction and re-render, or color correct each of the four streams at the beginning and use the rendered, color-corrected streams as our original "raw" footage, so each sequence doesn't need to be corrected and re-rendered independently. Or I suppose you could "nest" each edited sequence into a third sequence and color-correct it as a whole (rather than hundreds of individual clips).
I know correcting the edited sequences means fewer frames are affected (as obviously only one in four streams is onscreen at any one time) but it just seems simpler to correct the color prior to editing. I could let each stream re-render while I'm doing other things, like sleeping.
Does any of this make any sense? Recommendations, anyone? I guess I'm also wondering if multiple generations of CFHD-AVI means any loss, although I know in theory it shouldn't.
Thanks,
ag
To do a multicam edit in Premiere, you essentially use your "raw" tape as the basis for a multicam sequence; you nest the four stacked original streams into a new sequence. Our original footage for each act of the play is an hour x 4 cams.
So it seems to me that there are two or three ways to color-correct to match the cameras: either render each edited multicam sequence into a single CFHD-AVI and apply color correction and re-render, or color correct each of the four streams at the beginning and use the rendered, color-corrected streams as our original "raw" footage, so each sequence doesn't need to be corrected and re-rendered independently. Or I suppose you could "nest" each edited sequence into a third sequence and color-correct it as a whole (rather than hundreds of individual clips).
I know correcting the edited sequences means fewer frames are affected (as obviously only one in four streams is onscreen at any one time) but it just seems simpler to correct the color prior to editing. I could let each stream re-render while I'm doing other things, like sleeping.
Does any of this make any sense? Recommendations, anyone? I guess I'm also wondering if multiple generations of CFHD-AVI means any loss, although I know in theory it shouldn't.
Thanks,
ag