Thomas Singh February 25, 2018 Share February 25, 2018 One observation when studying film images and comparing them against digital is that film got less local edge details. The edges blend into each other in a way that makes the image look softer. Do you have any advice on how to reduce local edge contrast? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cary Knoop February 25, 2018 Share February 25, 2018 (edited) The easy answer is one cannot, it's technically too complicated. However if you want to spend the time processing your videos there is a http://www.vapoursynth.com/ script that attempts to do that and it could be used to reduce typical DVD edge "enhancement". Be prepared to spend time on finding the appropriate parameters for your video and for a processing speed of multiple seconds per frame. https://github.com/IFeelBloated/Vine Edited February 25, 2018 by Cary Knoop 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Emily Haine February 25, 2018 Share February 25, 2018 ...If you don't like the reflection of water hitting the ground at night, you probably don't like the look of digital... You need to evaluate the image and find ways to bring the different luminance levels closer. By decreasing the contrast so that your black and white levels are closer to each other definitely helps. A gentle roll-off woud also help a lot. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andy Minuth February 27, 2018 Share February 27, 2018 You need to work with spatial tools, to rework the edges. In Baselight I like to use Sharpen (negative range) and DFuse a lot for that. In Baselight 5 there are now even more powerful tools for that with Texture Equaliser and Texture Blend. They give You a lot more precise control over Your edges, because they disassemble the image into several different frequencies (sharp edges -> soft edges) and let You control each of these frequency bands individually. 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Singh February 27, 2018 Author Share February 27, 2018 Great techniques, and nice to see that you are actually aware of this and have solutions. Has Davinci Resolve similar texture tools? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Teo February 28, 2018 Share February 28, 2018 There are now Resolve FX, Sharpen, Soften, Edges,... nodes, have tried a bit with them, but not fully. Some time age I was quite happy with a primitive trick in Resolve for C300 HD to 2K DCP upscale looking more "film like" 1st node Blur 0.55 + opacity of the node 50% 2nd node Blur 0.47-45 (sharpening) 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Singh March 1, 2018 Author Share March 1, 2018 Blur, then sharpen? What do you accomplish with that? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Teo March 2, 2018 Share March 2, 2018 I know it sound ridiculus, but in that combo of lenses/camera (Canon Primes) + C300 (Mark I recording via SDI to ProResHQ) it was feeling more organic on the 2K projection. Blur is set to 50% opacity, that softens the edges a bit than sharpen made all look better, hard to explain in words. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Orash Rahnema March 2, 2018 Share March 2, 2018 8 hours ago, Thomas Singh said: Blur, then sharpen? What do you accomplish with that? one doens't reverse the other in this kind of process, the blur node average pixel values, in that way the edges bleeds into each other as well as the rest of the image, sharpening after that micro contrast an image that has pixel values that are closer together, and while it tries to reverse the blur, at the same time the pixels changed from the original image, so a pixel that "belonged" to the bg now seems part of the fg. yeah, kind of hard to explain i guess. in very small amount it mix the image together and sometimes it's even hard to see the result using such small values, so it's not always worth the hassle, it helps with super sharp lenses. a similiar process i used to do to 3d elements when i was a compositor is to add grain and then denoise (before adding footage grain on top again at the end of the composite) that helped a lot to remove the cg feeling out of it 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post Paul Dore March 2, 2018 Popular Post Share March 2, 2018 (edited) I tried with various convolution filters and frequency separation, but found that a quick and easy method actually worked the best (in Resolve anyway). Apply the EdgeDetect plugin to node 02 (a corrector node added to the node graph and connected to the source input), adjust parameters to get your edge alpha, then pipe node 02 RGB output to your main stream (node 01) alpha input, and apply blur. This approach can be adapted to work with channels individually. Edited March 2, 2018 by Paul Dore 8 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Singh March 8, 2018 Author Share March 8, 2018 (edited) This is really helpful! Is there any way that I can "see" the effect in 02 while working without stringing it to the output? And shouldn't it be a way to feed the blurred edges directly from 02 to the main stream? As it is set up now it seems like if I blur 02, the effect is not passed on. I only see the final effect if I blur the 01. node. Edited March 8, 2018 by Thomas Singh Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris DiBerardino March 8, 2018 Share March 8, 2018 2 hours ago, Thomas Singh said: As it is set up now it seems like if I blur 02, the effect is not passed on. I only see the final effect if I blur the 01. node. Node 02 in this workflow is used to get an alpha of the edges of the picture. You then feed that alpha into a node to blur only the edges. This is why you apply blur to node 01. Node 02 is your alpha source and Node 01 is where you do the look to those edges. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anton Meleshkevich April 18, 2018 Share April 18, 2018 Also using "Smoother" resize filter can help. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Singh April 18, 2018 Author Share April 18, 2018 What smoothing filter are you thinking about? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anton Meleshkevich April 18, 2018 Share April 18, 2018 1 minute ago, Thomas Singh said: What smoothing filter are you thinking about? In image scaling settings. When resolve downscales a footage, it uses different filters. Default is sharp as far as I know. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anton Meleshkevich April 18, 2018 Share April 18, 2018 (edited) Arri RAW 6.5k footage. DCI 2k timeline. 200% zoom. Look at "NEON" lable. Left side of the image - smoother resize filter + sharpen at 48 (where 50 is default). Right - sharper resize filter. Edited April 18, 2018 by Anton Meleshkevich 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Singh April 18, 2018 Author Share April 18, 2018 Why bother to adjust the sharpen? Would be more interesting to see those two filters without any additional sharpening. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anton Meleshkevich April 18, 2018 Share April 18, 2018 (edited) I did somethig wrong. Forget about the picture. I'm trying to figure it out. For some reason grabbing a still makes it sharper than on preview window. But decoding set to full res. However, it works. But the difference is not so noticeble as on the picture. Any thoughts about this strange thing? Why grabbed stills sharper than preview window? Edited April 18, 2018 by Anton Meleshkevich Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dennis Schmitz June 26, 2018 Share June 26, 2018 (edited) On 3/2/2018 at 1:01 PM, Paul Dore said: I tried with various convolution filters and frequency separation, but found that a quick and easy method actually worked the best (in Resolve anyway). Apply the EdgeDetect plugin to node 02 (a corrector node added to the node graph and connected to the source input), adjust parameters to get your edge alpha, then pipe node 02 RGB output to your main stream (node 01) alpha input, and apply blur. This approach can be adapted to work with channels individually. Whoa, that's actually fantastic. Thanks Was using Gaussian Blur on a node with a relatively low strength and blended it. GH5 footage is kinda challenging... Now using this as a threshold I don't have to deal with any texture loss! Edited June 26, 2018 by Dennis Schmitz Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nicolas Hanson March 24, 2019 Share March 24, 2019 What a great thread! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matt Jones January 17, 2020 Share January 17, 2020 On 3/2/2018 at 12:01 PM, Paul Dore said: I tried with various convolution filters and frequency separation, but found that a quick and easy method actually worked the best (in Resolve anyway). Apply the EdgeDetect plugin to node 02 (a corrector node added to the node graph and connected to the source input), adjust parameters to get your edge alpha, then pipe node 02 RGB output to your main stream (node 01) alpha input, and apply blur. This approach can be adapted to work with channels individually. I've been trying to replicate this but can't see to get the alpha from node 02 to appear in node 01 after I've added the EdgeDetect. If I then go to blur node 01 it blurs the entire image, not just the edges. What am I missing? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jussi Rovanperä January 18, 2020 Share January 18, 2020 (edited) You need to connect RGB to alpha, not alpha to alpha. Edited January 18, 2020 by Jussi Rovanperä 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matt Jones January 18, 2020 Share January 18, 2020 1 hour ago, Jussi Rovanperä said: You need to connect RGB to alpha, not alpha to alpha. Ah got you thanks for the help Jussi! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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