I just want to say that I fell in love with your work for its very technical aspects but also very simplified teach. I’ve been binge watching your videos since last night, and I subscribed Do you think you teach more like color grading videos and specifically I’ve seen a lack of like color separation with filmic looks & as a beginner that’s been the hardest to comprehend and achieve 😢
Thanks so much! Absolutely, there's a lot that goes into the whole topic and it can be daunting at first! Color seperation is a very important detail, in my opinion this can be achieved first on set so that you are recording footage that already has good seperation, and then also through great color balancing. After that it becomes creative choice and you can introduce this by pushing warmth into your highlights and cooler tones into your shadows for example. I will be making a series of videos for beginners very soon which will touch on everything from familiarity with Resolve's tools to color grading a project from start to finish.
Super informative. Your explanation of the tone curve contained answers to so many things that I've been wondering about when trying to get a filmic look to my footage.
I never really comment. But I love your explanation and detail into the whole process about tone curves and such. One thing is I feel the music is a bit too loud so it's a little hard to hear. Great work!
Thanks mam really appreciate it! I agree about the music, I watched it back on another device and realized that the speakers I had used to edit the video weren't giving me a true representation of the volume. Glad you liked the video. I look forward to making more 🙌
Hi there! I am using the LG OLED C2 48" which I'm finding is a bit big. But it does give me a 10 bit output with great contrast ratios and brightness levels at an affordable cost. You just have to be sure to calibrate it correctly and consistently
Absolutely, the goal isn't to achieve the impossible, but to try to find a digital way to treat footage so that we can have our desired outcome. We can learn from the approach
It depends on the license that suits you but you can click on the link in the description of the video and it will take you to the pricing options to have a look at 🙌
At 7:00 mins can’t hear you, your background music is louder than your voice and you holding the mic like ice cream cone. This type of thing has to stop. Not sure why most of creators on social media so lazy that they hold mic on their hands and loud music. 😅
Every film in the 70s and 80s was shot on film and they look absolutely nothing like all these "film emulation looks" these all look like 16mm homemade camera mixed with photography film, but look at 35mm film movies before digital ewas invented and they are super clean clear, not filled with teal and orange etcetetc
I agree, I think that we often exaggerate the grain and grittiness when emulating film and it all begins to look very similar. It's important to study images shot on film and notice what makes it what it is and not over do it.
THis guy is simply revealing top top secrets in a simple way
top secrets???
I just want to say that I fell in love with your work for its very technical aspects but also very simplified teach. I’ve been binge watching your videos since last night, and I subscribed
Do you think you teach more like color grading videos and specifically I’ve seen a lack of like color separation with filmic looks
& as a beginner that’s been the hardest to comprehend and achieve 😢
Thanks so much!
Absolutely, there's a lot that goes into the whole topic and it can be daunting at first! Color seperation is a very important detail, in my opinion this can be achieved first on set so that you are recording footage that already has good seperation, and then also through great color balancing. After that it becomes creative choice and you can introduce this by pushing warmth into your highlights and cooler tones into your shadows for example. I will be making a series of videos for beginners very soon which will touch on everything from familiarity with Resolve's tools to color grading a project from start to finish.
Super informative. Your explanation of the tone curve contained answers to so many things that I've been wondering about when trying to get a filmic look to my footage.
Epic! So glad to hear that my explanation could help!
I never really comment. But I love your explanation and detail into the whole process about tone curves and such. One thing is I feel the music is a bit too loud so it's a little hard to hear. Great work!
Thanks mam really appreciate it! I agree about the music, I watched it back on another device and realized that the speakers I had used to edit the video weren't giving me a true representation of the volume. Glad you liked the video. I look forward to making more 🙌
Best Film emulation video on the net
Glad you enjoyed it!
BABE Wake Up Graham HAS Posted A Brilliant Colour Video
Haha! Thanks bro! Glad you enjoyed it!
Perfection ! 🔥🔥🔥 i hope if you make a video explainig the first workflow node tree one by one. i'm new to davinci and felt like i'm missing a lot :(
I will definitely be doing a video - stay tuned for the next video coming soon which includes node trees for you to import and try yourself
@@grahamhunt_ Woow! thank you so much, i subscribed and will be waiting Eagerly
Was requesting for a tutorial where you use the tools and some adjustments on the dehancer
Amazing video !! The info of the tone curve is priceless
Thanks so much! Glad you liked it. I agree, it's helped me a lot with the projects I've been working on
i thought this channel had like a mil subs atleast, beautiful content.
you the best my brother🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Wow!😮😮 Great color grading in DaVinci résolve 🎉🎉 i like the color grading in DaVinci résolve 🎉 again more tutorial on DaVinci résolve 🎉🎉🎉
More to come!
@@grahamhunt_ ok fine
Hi Graham. I'm on the market for a monitor for editing and colorgrading my films. I was wondering wich one you are using?
Hi there! I am using the LG OLED C2 48" which I'm finding is a bit big. But it does give me a 10 bit output with great contrast ratios and brightness levels at an affordable cost. You just have to be sure to calibrate it correctly and consistently
Can cineon film lock work on any camera ? Like can it work if you shoot in slog3 in Sony,canon,lumix or even Panasonic
@@89_Drip absolutely, you just do a rec709 conversion in a node before, then another cst to take it from Rec 709 to Cineon film log
Eyyy South African!!!!! Nice
Represent!!
Friend, the photochemist is impossible to emulate to begin with, it doesn't handle gamma.
Absolutely, the goal isn't to achieve the impossible, but to try to find a digital way to treat footage so that we can have our desired outcome. We can learn from the approach
Damn you're good
Thank you🙏🙏🙌
Great video at only 400 subscribers!
Thanks so much! Hoping to grow the channel and keep sharing content that brings value
how much to purchase it?
It depends on the license that suits you but you can click on the link in the description of the video and it will take you to the pricing options to have a look at 🙌
Ekapa lodumo
At 7:00 mins can’t hear you, your background music is louder than your voice and you holding the mic like ice cream cone. This type of thing has to stop. Not sure why most of creators on social media so lazy that they hold mic on their hands and loud music. 😅
Sorry about that. I had some monitoring the audio levels correctly. Holding the mic doesn't come from laziness, it comes from a lack of other gear.
Every film in the 70s and 80s was shot on film and they look absolutely nothing like all these "film emulation looks" these all look like 16mm homemade camera mixed with photography film, but look at 35mm film movies before digital ewas invented and they are super clean clear, not filled with teal and orange etcetetc
I agree, I think that we often exaggerate the grain and grittiness when emulating film and it all begins to look very similar. It's important to study images shot on film and notice what makes it what it is and not over do it.