Nice looking video flawlessly edited. Really enjoyed seeing and hearing about Will's process and the work product! Looking forward to seeing how his fine art printing evolves.
Thanks! I'm glad you liked it! I shoot all of my videos flat during production in order to maximize my creative flexibility in post-production. This one was no different :) While some videos benefit from a high-contrast, high-saturation "Hollywood" style color grade, I opted to leave this video both luma-flat and chroma-flat in order to artistically mimic the flat, de-saturated graphic style of the screenprinting featured in the video. If you are interested in technical specs, I set my whites to 70% luminance to mimic a soft-lighting condition, such as a cloudy day. Also, the room we shot in was mostly white, so limiting the luminance to 70% keeps the video from appearing overblown. And the blacks were limited to not crossing below 10% luminance, which provides the flat "indie" look I was going for. Thanks for your interest in my video! I love discussing videos with people who know what they are talking about :)
Well I knew it was flat, but I just wondered if you meant to leave it that way. I do think it works quite well. And the entire documentary is very well done. BTW what editing program do you use, and what color correction program are you using. I have Davinci Resolve, but I don't use it enough. I just got some free LUTS that I like.
@@NathanAndRose I actually really like this style of grading, it makes it feel much more intimate, natural and humble in genuinity of Will showing the world his creative and thought processes, his personal workspace and the reailty of amount of dedication, structure, focus and physical effort it takes to create high quality analogue prints. It gives the viewer a nice impression of a very personal and sensoric experience, working with physical material using his hands, sensing the fabric and structure of the substance. Beautiful video!
Nice looking video flawlessly edited. Really enjoyed seeing and hearing about Will's process and the work product! Looking forward to seeing how his fine art printing evolves.
What type of ink do you use?
Nice job Nathan. The only thought I had was that it the interview looked like you videoed it in a flat cini style, then did not color grade it.
Thanks! I'm glad you liked it!
I shoot all of my videos flat during production in order to maximize my creative flexibility in post-production. This one was no different :) While some videos benefit from a high-contrast, high-saturation "Hollywood" style color grade, I opted to leave this video both luma-flat and chroma-flat in order to artistically mimic the flat, de-saturated graphic style of the screenprinting featured in the video.
If you are interested in technical specs, I set my whites to 70% luminance to mimic a soft-lighting condition, such as a cloudy day. Also, the room we shot in was mostly white, so limiting the luminance to 70% keeps the video from appearing overblown. And the blacks were limited to not crossing below 10% luminance, which provides the flat "indie" look I was going for.
Thanks for your interest in my video! I love discussing videos with people who know what they are talking about :)
Well I knew it was flat, but I just wondered if you meant to leave it that way. I do think it works quite well. And the entire documentary is very well done. BTW what editing program do you use, and what color correction program are you using. I have Davinci Resolve, but I don't use it enough. I just got some free LUTS that I like.
@@NathanAndRose I actually really like this style of grading, it makes it feel much more intimate, natural and humble in genuinity of Will showing the world his creative and thought processes, his personal workspace and the reailty of amount of dedication, structure, focus and physical effort it takes to create high quality analogue prints. It gives the viewer a nice impression of a very personal and sensoric experience, working with physical material using his hands, sensing the fabric and structure of the substance. Beautiful video!