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Showcasing Magic Lantern => Share Your Videos => Topic started by: navism on January 17, 2015, 05:40:05 AM

Title: Canon 5D3 RAW in Tokyo Disneyland Once Upon A Time Frozen Verson!
Post by: navism on January 17, 2015, 05:40:05 AM
I am a beginner for editing video.

I want to share my video which I took in Jan 13th, 2015 in Tokyo Disneyland - Once Upon A Time Frozen Verson
I share to the beginning of Frozen Part because the video is very long.
I am happy that I can record 20 mins non-stop 1080p.

Canon 5D3 RAW Version:


Shogun + GH4:


Canon X20:


I think my color grading is not good enough.
Those video are too dark but can see Canon 5D3 RAW is not worse than GH4 4K.

Please enjoy and give me some feedback even bad feedback.  :)
Title: Re: Canon 5D3 RAW in Tokyo Disneyland Once Upon A Time Frozen Verson!
Post by: ereese on January 18, 2015, 01:07:39 PM
Long but interesting in the sense of posting a mix of hardware and storage processes, thanks.
Title: Re: Canon 5D3 RAW in Tokyo Disneyland Once Upon A Time Frozen Verson!
Post by: navism on January 21, 2015, 05:39:09 AM
Thanks for watching.  :)
Title: Re: Canon 5D3 RAW in Tokyo Disneyland Once Upon A Time Frozen Verson!
Post by: mkrjf on January 25, 2015, 03:55:48 AM
What lens and settings did you use (aperture, iso, shutter speed)? Color grading software? What did color space did you output to? Do you have a calibrated monitor? if Rec709 there would be information loss (likely darker).
Too dark is relative. I suspect performance should be better than GH4 just on sensor size and raw (unless GH4 external recorder).
Anyway thanks for sharing - night time out doors with video projection seems like a difficult subject regardless.
I have used f1.5 Rokinon for night shoots and can get a lot of information out of the blacks. But for my f4 lens it would unpleasantly noisy.
I am studying Japanese and should have known the Disney characters would be speaking japanese but still pleasant surprise ;)

I suggest trying to photograph a person next to a strong candle light as a test. Too dark is not usually the issue but rather too much noise in the darks.
ありがとうございました
Mike