A bit of everything…
A Certain Time Of Year (GH4) from Colby Moore on Vimeo.
Panasonic Lumix FZ200 Review (Wrbdigitalcamerareviews).
Olympus Stylus 1s hands-on at DC.watch.
Panasonic patent to obtain a high-resolution image from the RGB and IR (Egami).
Sony RX100 III, Canon G7X, Canon G1 X II, Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX100 and Fujifilm X30 battle at Lonelyspeck.
Panasonic HX-A500 Quickreview + RAW Footage (ActionCameraRumors).
Digimanie.cz FZ1000 4K test videos (one and two).
New GM5 bag in Japan (DC.watch).
Gary Yost: “Well, here’s another Micro 4/3 piece that I think your readers will appreciate. I was the colorist on a holiday video for a popular San Francisco Italian restaurant called Delfina, and the video asks the question “What is Happiness?”.
It was entirely shot on the GH4 in 4K (with the Lumix 12-35 and the Nokton 42.5, using the Natural picture style. I was the colorist on the project and graded the entire piece in Davinci Resolve and it looks quite beautiful… extremely filmic with no crunch “video look.”
Here’s the piece:
https://vimeo.com/115015228
and the before/after comparisons between straight-out-of-camera footage and the graded final work.
https://vimeo.com/114977553
A typical node graph in Resolve for one of these shots would start out like this:
1st: primary adjustment for global exposure, contrast and white balance.
2nd: power windows to separate foreground subject from background (usually two ovals… one for head and one for shoulders, linked and tracked together). This window optimizes subject contrast and lighting, adds eye sharpening, in some cases pro-mist for skin treatment
3rd: outside node inverting the power windows to darken background and in some cases also desaturate background slightly.
4th: Osiris M31 LUT at somewhere between 40-60% along with final global contrast and exposure adjustment.
Beyond the above, there were plenty of shots that needed additional HSL qualification for doing things like recovering green in the parsley, doing Hue vs Sat and Hue vs Hue adjustments, and operations like that. Probably 50% of the shots needed additional work with these types of secondaries.”
Jonas: “I made some pictures that move, using the Panasonic LX100 and the GoPro Hero4 Black. http://youtu.be/CT2gavQUfQA“