Vedran Rupic
June 4th, 2006, 08:12 AM
I have recently purchased a XL2, a great camera i believe, as i went from consumer based single chip cameras.
But there is one thing that bugs me...
Recently i shot a clip outside when it was sunrise, i framed the sky and some of the forrest and exposed for the sky..
The underexposed trees in the woods should be very dark almost black...
so when i imported this to my NLE i saw a lot of noise in the dark areas?
mosquito noise is perhaps the term?
I know that DV has a limited compressor/decompressor system, But why cant dark be just dark or black?
I mean to hold color info of only one color seems less space consuming than holding info to all these diffrently shaded, fast moving pixels.
I used a aparture of about 5,6 i believe.
Is there anyway to avoid this pixeling in the dark areas, I don't need the info from the area, i just want it black...
Is there any special settings or am i missing something out?
I've tried pressing the blacks but it's the same thing...
using more light and still keeping a high ratio to darken down i post is perhaps an option, but can't it be done in another "on camera" method?
I really like dark contrasty images and this bugs the hell out of me....
But there is one thing that bugs me...
Recently i shot a clip outside when it was sunrise, i framed the sky and some of the forrest and exposed for the sky..
The underexposed trees in the woods should be very dark almost black...
so when i imported this to my NLE i saw a lot of noise in the dark areas?
mosquito noise is perhaps the term?
I know that DV has a limited compressor/decompressor system, But why cant dark be just dark or black?
I mean to hold color info of only one color seems less space consuming than holding info to all these diffrently shaded, fast moving pixels.
I used a aparture of about 5,6 i believe.
Is there anyway to avoid this pixeling in the dark areas, I don't need the info from the area, i just want it black...
Is there any special settings or am i missing something out?
I've tried pressing the blacks but it's the same thing...
using more light and still keeping a high ratio to darken down i post is perhaps an option, but can't it be done in another "on camera" method?
I really like dark contrasty images and this bugs the hell out of me....