Glenn Thomas
June 1st, 2007, 05:11 AM
I've only briefly tested this, although not properly, but it appears to work alright. A way of dealing with the slight vignetting that may appear in some shots, normally due to wider lenses being used.
1) With your camera & 35mm adapter set up, attach your problem lens and then grab a piece completely flat white paper or anything else with a perfectly even flat white surface.
2) Place the paper so that it covers the entire view. Make sure your lighting is evenly lit too. Ensure your exposure is correct with no blown out areas using the zebras on your camera and shoot a few seconds of the white paper. You should easily see the dark vignetted edges.
3) Shoot your footage as normal with the same lens, vignetting and all.
4) Now, the editing stage. I use Vegas myself, but I'm sure this can be done with almost any editing app. Grab a still of the white paper with the vignetted edges. Place this on the very top track. Turn the track off for the time being.
5) Next load in your footage, edit as normal.
6) Alright, grab your white clip from the top track, activate the track again and place it directly above any vignetted footage you've edited that was shot with the same lens. Stretch it out to fit the width of the clip whilst making sure the edges line up.
7) Then next go to the white paper track's level slider and set the compositing mode of the track to 'Burn'. Now, you should no longer see the vignetting on the track below!
8) Of course some finer adjustments can be made. It might help to add a slight bit of blur to the white paper clip. Also reduce it's saturation to 0. Finally, you can also adjust the track's level slider depending on how much vignetting reduction you require.
The final result may end up looking slightly noisy, but should still be an improvement. A couple of further suggestions: Store the white paper images on your computer for each problem lens. Rather than having to shoot the white paper before each set up. Lastly, it may speed up your work flow by doing this to all your footage before editng and then saving out all these fixed clips that you can then edit. Rather than placing the white paper clip over every edited slice whilst you're editng.
Hope some of you find this useful.
1) With your camera & 35mm adapter set up, attach your problem lens and then grab a piece completely flat white paper or anything else with a perfectly even flat white surface.
2) Place the paper so that it covers the entire view. Make sure your lighting is evenly lit too. Ensure your exposure is correct with no blown out areas using the zebras on your camera and shoot a few seconds of the white paper. You should easily see the dark vignetted edges.
3) Shoot your footage as normal with the same lens, vignetting and all.
4) Now, the editing stage. I use Vegas myself, but I'm sure this can be done with almost any editing app. Grab a still of the white paper with the vignetted edges. Place this on the very top track. Turn the track off for the time being.
5) Next load in your footage, edit as normal.
6) Alright, grab your white clip from the top track, activate the track again and place it directly above any vignetted footage you've edited that was shot with the same lens. Stretch it out to fit the width of the clip whilst making sure the edges line up.
7) Then next go to the white paper track's level slider and set the compositing mode of the track to 'Burn'. Now, you should no longer see the vignetting on the track below!
8) Of course some finer adjustments can be made. It might help to add a slight bit of blur to the white paper clip. Also reduce it's saturation to 0. Finally, you can also adjust the track's level slider depending on how much vignetting reduction you require.
The final result may end up looking slightly noisy, but should still be an improvement. A couple of further suggestions: Store the white paper images on your computer for each problem lens. Rather than having to shoot the white paper before each set up. Lastly, it may speed up your work flow by doing this to all your footage before editng and then saving out all these fixed clips that you can then edit. Rather than placing the white paper clip over every edited slice whilst you're editng.
Hope some of you find this useful.