Darryl Gregory wrote:Pete Proniewicz-Brooks wrote:MCShooter wrote:Using a BMCC with firmware 1.2 and am still getting the infamous black sun spot when shooting outdoors and the sun is in the frame. I tried Resolve's 'Recover highlights' checkbox but that did not fix the issue. I am actually using Premiere to edit so I would like to somehow solve it there. Any suggestions?
Resolve could be used with a power window and a tracker to remove it.
Resolve can not do as good as After Effects, and not inline with the round tripping and editing needed.
Resolves tracker is awesome, but AE is a called
After Effects for a reason.
My offer still stands for a few days, If you can stand it (a Boring TUT), I will create it.
Does however add an extra stage, an extra render, assuming a colour grade is being done at some point.
If you have no other reason to go to AE, but you are using Resolve anyway then using AE for this is overkill.
MCShooter wrote:This is the only camera I've seen this on. Shouldn't maybe BlackMagic fix this in the firmware rather than us trying to jump through hoops or cut footage out?
It's a known issue on a number of cameras as it is an inherent issue with CMOS sensors. Many have since used firmware to mask the issue.
There is no way to truely fix it in firmware, where firmware is used it is masking the problem, not fixing it.
Black spots in highlights is where a pixel or group of pixels is so overloaded it temporarily fails. This is potentially causing permanent damage to the camera. Hiding it with a firmware patch is a double edged sword.
It is much safer to use a ND or a Graduated ND or other hardware fix as this will help prolong the life of the camera (and helps keep you aware of the light and how to deal with it.