Jim Newberry
December 27th, 2009, 07:56 PM
I'm experienced with color management for still photography, but have some questions regarding color grading for video. I'm using FCP 6.06 on a Mac with Snow Leopard (10.6.2). I have a NEC 2490WUXi display (without an added video card), and also an Ikegami TM9-1 broadcast monitor. At this point everything I'm working on is for Web viewing only (not for DVD/TV viewing) Here are my questions:
What settings are recommended for the display? I use Spectraview software to calibrate my NEC display. 2.2 is the suggested gamma to use for video post production, right?*
My broadcast monitor does not have a digital input. Is there any point in using it for Web only distribution? Would something like the Matrox MXO be much better than my current NEC display (without any added video card)?
I've read a bunch of stuff online regarding Snow Leopard, QT, FCP, and Gamma (1.8 vs 2.2, etc) and I'm still confused. Again, so far I'm using Spectraview software to calibrate my NEC display, using 2.2 gamma (D65). Assuming that's OK so far, do I need to change any gamma settings in FCP or elsewhere?
* I use a calibration puck with Spectraview and the NEC. Also, there are several settings in the Spectraview software; here's how the manual describes them (the last item under each setting is gamma). I'm not planning on showing my work on TVs or projection, so I assume "broadcast monitor" and "digital cinema" would not be the correct settings. Maybe "monitor standard?" But those settings look off--1.8 gamma and 9300k...
Print Standard
Commonly referred to as Proofing Standard. Used widely for the proofing of color transparencies or press output.
D50 (0.346, 0.359)
1.8
Broadcast Video
Used for editing images and video intended to be displayed on televisions using the NTSC, PAL, or SECAM standards.
D65
(0.313, 0.329)
2.2
Monitor Standard
Images intended to be displayed on most standard uncalibrated computer displays. Suitable for use with office lighting.
9300K+27 MPCD
(0.283, 0.297)
1.8
Digital Cinema
Images and video intended for cinematic projection.
(0.314, 0.351)
2.6
Here's another thread about Snow Leopard and gamma confusion:
http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/non-linear-editing-mac/467830-fcp-canvas-window-looks-much-darker-than-exports.html
What settings are recommended for the display? I use Spectraview software to calibrate my NEC display. 2.2 is the suggested gamma to use for video post production, right?*
My broadcast monitor does not have a digital input. Is there any point in using it for Web only distribution? Would something like the Matrox MXO be much better than my current NEC display (without any added video card)?
I've read a bunch of stuff online regarding Snow Leopard, QT, FCP, and Gamma (1.8 vs 2.2, etc) and I'm still confused. Again, so far I'm using Spectraview software to calibrate my NEC display, using 2.2 gamma (D65). Assuming that's OK so far, do I need to change any gamma settings in FCP or elsewhere?
* I use a calibration puck with Spectraview and the NEC. Also, there are several settings in the Spectraview software; here's how the manual describes them (the last item under each setting is gamma). I'm not planning on showing my work on TVs or projection, so I assume "broadcast monitor" and "digital cinema" would not be the correct settings. Maybe "monitor standard?" But those settings look off--1.8 gamma and 9300k...
Print Standard
Commonly referred to as Proofing Standard. Used widely for the proofing of color transparencies or press output.
D50 (0.346, 0.359)
1.8
Broadcast Video
Used for editing images and video intended to be displayed on televisions using the NTSC, PAL, or SECAM standards.
D65
(0.313, 0.329)
2.2
Monitor Standard
Images intended to be displayed on most standard uncalibrated computer displays. Suitable for use with office lighting.
9300K+27 MPCD
(0.283, 0.297)
1.8
Digital Cinema
Images and video intended for cinematic projection.
(0.314, 0.351)
2.6
Here's another thread about Snow Leopard and gamma confusion:
http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/non-linear-editing-mac/467830-fcp-canvas-window-looks-much-darker-than-exports.html