We can now grade in HDR with the M1 Pro/Max MacBook Pro mini LED display with Adobe Premiere or Davinci Resolve, I'm speechless the first time I saw HDR video on my MacBook Pro 16" screen and it boosted the highlights up to 1600 nits while still keeping contrast and all the detail in the shadow. Simply amazing!
We had a MacBook Pro 16" on set on our test shoot and when we compared it to the fifty grand AUD Sony BVM-HX310 we were amazed at how good the MacBook was. It is an impressive HDR display
I still wouldn't grade on that display. While the shadow detail is impressive it doesn't reach nearly the same level of blacks as OLED and especially QD-OLED so there's a huge range of low end you're simply unable to perceive. I'd do bulk of the grading on an OLED TV and fine tune it on my MacBook incase I'm on the move.
I've been experimenting with HDR filming in my spare time, and want to upload my videos in HDR. The image looks much more life like, and more exciting to look at and will be the way you'll stand out against the many others out there.
Great timing, I've been working on a new chapter of my course which is all about turning timelapse sequences (RAW photos) into HDR video. I've had to do an enormous amount of research and testing to finalise it. There's a shockingly small amount of info out there, and nobody seems to be really certain which methods are best for this particular workflow.
The paucity of information out there is strange but it may be possibly because HDR is presently siloed into the large Streaming dramas/documentaries projects? Once RUclips gets its act together HDR should be more accessible
We are keen to upload the HDR version but RUclips's HDR implementation is just broken. We are just humble camerapeople and the labyrinth HDR upload/processing and buggy software has so far defeated us.
@@australiancinematographers7742 Are you uploading from a computer with an HDR-enabled display (or upload from an iPad with HDR screen)? Otherwise you'll not see the HDR version.
Can you upload it to an other Plattform than RUclips? - the whole point for us with HDR is still this compqdabiluty issue. I wonder how the video will look like in hdr, because on my phone i had oftentimes droped blacks.
@@australiancinematographers7742 RUclips tends to process in SDR and have the HDR version ready much later. Have you revisited the uploaded video to see any changes? My apologies if you already have.
A complete guide to the HDR10 workflow aimed primarily at those wishing to create and share HDR videos on RUclips may be found by Googling Monster Guide HDR.
Thank You Sir
We can now grade in HDR with the M1 Pro/Max MacBook Pro mini LED display with Adobe Premiere or Davinci Resolve, I'm speechless the first time I saw HDR video on my MacBook Pro 16" screen and it boosted the highlights up to 1600 nits while still keeping contrast and all the detail in the shadow. Simply amazing!
We had a MacBook Pro 16" on set on our test shoot and when we compared it to the fifty grand AUD Sony BVM-HX310 we were amazed at how good the MacBook was. It is an impressive HDR display
I still wouldn't grade on that display. While the shadow detail is impressive it doesn't reach nearly the same level of blacks as OLED and especially QD-OLED so there's a huge range of low end you're simply unable to perceive. I'd do bulk of the grading on an OLED TV and fine tune it on my MacBook incase I'm on the move.
I've been experimenting with HDR filming in my spare time, and want to upload my videos in HDR. The image looks much more life like, and more exciting to look at and will be the way you'll stand out against the many others out there.
Fascinating, well-done production on a subject about which there is so little understanding. Learned a lot; thanks very much.
Great timing, I've been working on a new chapter of my course which is all about turning timelapse sequences (RAW photos) into HDR video. I've had to do an enormous amount of research and testing to finalise it. There's a shockingly small amount of info out there, and nobody seems to be really certain which methods are best for this particular workflow.
The paucity of information out there is strange but it may be possibly because HDR is presently siloed into the large Streaming dramas/documentaries projects? Once RUclips gets its act together HDR should be more accessible
Thank You
With Respect Sir
Where can i find the HDR Version mentioned at 1:00?
From a reply on the Newsshooter website: "while we have a HDR version of this video we still have not managed to successfully upload it to RUclips"
We are keen to upload the HDR version but RUclips's HDR implementation is just broken. We are just humble camerapeople and the labyrinth HDR upload/processing and buggy software has so far defeated us.
@@australiancinematographers7742 Are you uploading from a computer with an HDR-enabled display (or upload from an iPad with HDR screen)? Otherwise you'll not see the HDR version.
Can you upload it to an other Plattform than RUclips? - the whole point for us with HDR is still this compqdabiluty issue. I wonder how the video will look like in hdr, because on my phone i had oftentimes droped blacks.
@@australiancinematographers7742 RUclips tends to process in SDR and have the HDR version ready much later. Have you revisited the uploaded video to see any changes? My apologies if you already have.
A complete guide to the HDR10 workflow aimed primarily at those wishing to create and share HDR videos on RUclips may be found by Googling Monster Guide HDR.