Best Log to work with?

Get answers to your questions about color grading, editing and finishing with DaVinci Resolve.
  • Author
  • Message
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 7:10 pm

After finding out about the color space transform OFX node, I have just realized I can match any camera to any other, but since finding this out, I have no idea which Log space is the best to color grade in. I know S-Log3 is really hard to grade, V-Log is relatively easy, and Blackmagic Film Gen 4 is medium in difficulty. I see some recommending LogC (Arri), some recommending DaVinci Wide, and some recommending just jumping straight into conversion to Rec.709 and working with that. I don't use color management since I prefer just doing everything through nodes and work solely in R709 for delivery to YouTube.

Which Log is most friendly and flexible for grading? Arri LogC, DaVinci Wide, straight conversion to R709, or something else that I haven't touched on like Canon Log3 or something.

All responses welcome!
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline

Ivanturas

  • Posts: 44
  • Joined: Thu Feb 25, 2021 6:08 pm
  • Real Name: Iván Fuentes Hagar

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 7:23 pm

Alexrocks1253 wrote: I know S-Log3 is really hard to grade,

It is? never had an issue with it.
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 8:01 pm

Ivanturas wrote:
Alexrocks1253 wrote: I know S-Log3 is really hard to grade,

It is? never had an issue with it.

For me I found it hard to grade personally compared to V-Log and F-Log but that's from personal use. Different types of log seem to be easier to grade for some people than others. I'm glad that it is easy for you but the nice thing about the color transform is that we can effectively convert log right inside of the editor.

It means I could get the hardest to grade Log in the world and switch it to something easier.

I can't really use S-Log3 on the actual camera either since it is one of the older 8-bit Sonys and can't afford an extra $3500 camera to be able to use it, sadly.
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline

RikshaDriver

  • Posts: 653
  • Joined: Sun Aug 12, 2018 10:08 am
  • Location: Melbourne
  • Real Name: Asim Siddiqui

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 8:59 pm

Alexrocks1253 wrote:After finding out about the color space transform OFX node, I have just realized I can match any camera to any other, but since finding this out, I have no idea which Log space is the best to color grade in. I know S-Log3 is really hard to grade, V-Log is relatively easy, and Blackmagic Film Gen 4 is medium in difficulty. I see some recommending LogC (Arri), some recommending DaVinci Wide, and some recommending just jumping straight into conversion to Rec.709 and working with that. I don't use color management since I prefer just doing everything through nodes and work solely in R709 for delivery to YouTube.

Which Log is most friendly and flexible for grading? Arri LogC, DaVinci Wide, straight conversion to R709, or something else that I haven't touched on like Canon Log3 or something.

All responses welcome!


None of the above. You're going about it the wrong way.

My recommendation is to go with a Color Managed workflow and either use ACES or RCM with DaVinci Wide Gamut / Intermediate. This will allow the footage to be transformed to a higher DR and Gamut, then mapped down to 709. You're basically trying to achieve something similar with a CST.
GitHub Projects: https://github.com/xtremestuff/
Commercial Plugins: https://xtremestuff.net/store/
Offline
User avatar

Uli Plank

  • Posts: 25469
  • Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2013 2:48 am
  • Location: Germany and Indonesia

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 10:15 pm

Of course, S-Log3 is crap out of a camera with only 8 bit recording. From a professional camera it's easier to grade than S-Log2.
That is, if you like Sony's skin tones…
My disaster protection: export a .drp file to a physically separated storage regularly.
www.digitalproduction.com

Studio 19.1.3
MacOS 13.7.4, 2017 iMac, 32 GB, Radeon Pro 580 + eGPU
MacBook M1 Pro, 16 GPU cores, 32 GB RAM, MacOS 14.7.2
SE, USM G3
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 10:26 pm

Uli Plank wrote:Of course, S-Log3 is crap out of a camera with only 8 bit recording. From a professional camera it's easier to grade than S-Log2.
That is, if you like Sony's skin tones…

I find them sort of natural but greenish in Log which is why I use HLG3 as the acquisition format
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 10:27 pm

RikshaDriver wrote:
Alexrocks1253 wrote:After finding out about the color space transform OFX node, I have just realized I can match any camera to any other, but since finding this out, I have no idea which Log space is the best to color grade in. I know S-Log3 is really hard to grade, V-Log is relatively easy, and Blackmagic Film Gen 4 is medium in difficulty. I see some recommending LogC (Arri), some recommending DaVinci Wide, and some recommending just jumping straight into conversion to Rec.709 and working with that. I don't use color management since I prefer just doing everything through nodes and work solely in R709 for delivery to YouTube.

Which Log is most friendly and flexible for grading? Arri LogC, DaVinci Wide, straight conversion to R709, or something else that I haven't touched on like Canon Log3 or something.

All responses welcome!


None of the above. You're going about it the wrong way.

My recommendation is to go with a Color Managed workflow and either use ACES or RCM with DaVinci Wide Gamut / Intermediate. This will allow the footage to be transformed to a higher DR and Gamut, then mapped down to 709. You're basically trying to achieve something similar with a CST.

What if I have footage from multiple cameras then? Usually the input color grade can only be one thing unless nodes state otherwise using color transform
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline
User avatar

Uli Plank

  • Posts: 25469
  • Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2013 2:48 am
  • Location: Germany and Indonesia

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 10:35 pm

The new RCM can handle that. I can highly recommend the tutorial by Rippletraining, done by Alexis van Hurkman himself.
https://www.rippletraining.com/products ... esolve-17/
My disaster protection: export a .drp file to a physically separated storage regularly.
www.digitalproduction.com

Studio 19.1.3
MacOS 13.7.4, 2017 iMac, 32 GB, Radeon Pro 580 + eGPU
MacBook M1 Pro, 16 GPU cores, 32 GB RAM, MacOS 14.7.2
SE, USM G3
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostFri Apr 23, 2021 11:22 pm

Uli Plank wrote:The new RCM can handle that. I can highly recommend the tutorial by Rippletraining, done by Alexis van Hurkman himself.
https://www.rippletraining.com/products ... esolve-17/

So I suppose that each clip has its own input thing (HLG BT.2020) and then the timeline is say, Davinci Wide, then the output is R709 2.4?
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline
User avatar

Uli Plank

  • Posts: 25469
  • Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2013 2:48 am
  • Location: Germany and Indonesia

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSat Apr 24, 2021 5:14 am

For example, yes.
My disaster protection: export a .drp file to a physically separated storage regularly.
www.digitalproduction.com

Studio 19.1.3
MacOS 13.7.4, 2017 iMac, 32 GB, Radeon Pro 580 + eGPU
MacBook M1 Pro, 16 GPU cores, 32 GB RAM, MacOS 14.7.2
SE, USM G3
Offline

Ellory Yu

  • Posts: 4684
  • Joined: Wed Jul 30, 2014 5:25 pm

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSat Apr 24, 2021 6:27 am

Alexrocks1253 wrote:What if I have footage from multiple cameras then? Usually the input color grade can only be one thing unless nodes state otherwise using color transform

I recommend using an ACES workflow, group all the clips for each camera log, and have an IDT and ODT nodes for the pre-group and post-group clips respectively to do the transforms.
Then do the grade. There are good tutorials on ACES like this 3 part intro...
URSA Mini Pro 4.6K G2, BMPCC 6K. iMac Pro 27” 5K Retina, 64gb, 1Tb SSD, 12Tb M.2 NVMe TB4 DAS, 36Tb HDD DAS, Vega 56 8gb GPU/ BM Vega 56 8gb eGPU, MacOS Sequoia+DVRS 19.1.4, BM Panel & Speed Editor. Mac Mini M2 Pro 10/16 cores, Sequoia+DVRS 20
Offline

Hendrik Proosa

  • Posts: 3398
  • Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2012 6:53 am
  • Location: Estonia

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSat Apr 24, 2021 7:13 am

Alexrocks1253 wrote:So I suppose that each clip has its own input thing (HLG BT.2020) and then the timeline is say, Davinci Wide, then the output is R709 2.4?

This is how color management works, yes. You set appropriate input transforms based on what your different footage is (if they differ from default interpreration) and CM moves them all to intermediate colorspace where grading happens. Project and metadata interpretation defaults are just ”use this unless I override it”, not hard fixed ”it is what it is”, sometimes it seems to trip people over. Set your IDTs as appropriate for every clip, changing it manually if needed. In the end, output transforms move data to whatever colorspace you need for display or export.
I do stuff
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSat Apr 24, 2021 12:38 pm

Ellory Yu wrote:
Alexrocks1253 wrote:What if I have footage from multiple cameras then? Usually the input color grade can only be one thing unless nodes state otherwise using color transform

I recommend using an ACES workflow, group all the clips for each camera log, and have an IDT and ODT nodes for the pre-group and post-group clips respectively to do the transforms.
Then do the grade. There are good tutorials on ACES like this 3 part intro...

Thanks, I'll go take a look.
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSat Apr 24, 2021 12:39 pm

Hendrik Proosa wrote:
Alexrocks1253 wrote:So I suppose that each clip has its own input thing (HLG BT.2020) and then the timeline is say, Davinci Wide, then the output is R709 2.4?

This is how color management works, yes. You set appropriate input transforms based on what your different footage is (if they differ from default interpreration) and CM moves them all to intermediate colorspace where grading happens. Project and metadata interpretation defaults are just ”use this unless I override it”, not hard fixed ”it is what it is”, sometimes it seems to trip people over. Set your IDTs as appropriate for every clip, changing it manually if needed. In the end, output transforms move data to whatever colorspace you need for display or export.

I have found when working using color management, the lift, gamma, and gain wheels act way differently. Have you experienced this?
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline

Hendrik Proosa

  • Posts: 3398
  • Joined: Wed Aug 22, 2012 6:53 am
  • Location: Estonia

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSun Apr 25, 2021 8:51 am

It depends on working space where color manipulation happens. Different working spaces express same colors with different RGB values and thus same applied math produces different effect.

What ”colorspace aware tools” means (came to R in v17) is that there is an additional implicit working space where color ops are applied, and data is moved to/from that to produce predictable response independent from timeline space.
I do stuff
Offline

John Griffin

  • Posts: 1341
  • Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2015 4:18 pm

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSun Apr 25, 2021 9:16 am

Alexrocks1253 wrote:
Hendrik Proosa wrote:
Alexrocks1253 wrote:So I suppose that each clip has its own input thing (HLG BT.2020) and then the timeline is say, Davinci Wide, then the output is R709 2.4?

This is how color management works, yes. You set appropriate input transforms based on what your different footage is (if they differ from default interpreration) and CM moves them all to intermediate colorspace where grading happens. Project and metadata interpretation defaults are just ”use this unless I override it”, not hard fixed ”it is what it is”, sometimes it seems to trip people over. Set your IDTs as appropriate for every clip, changing it manually if needed. In the end, output transforms move data to whatever colorspace you need for display or export.

I have found when working using color management, the lift, gamma, and gain wheels act way differently. Have you experienced this?

Yes this is well known. The workaround in ACES is to create an in and out conversion ‘sandwich’ node from ACES to REC709 and back again so all your tonal adjustments using LGG happen in REC709 which is where they are designed to operate. In RCM LGG are unintuitive at best and unusable at worst. BM really needs to fix this as shadow mid and highlight work over very Narrow tonal ranges and are not designed for large tonal shifts as they create ugly artefacts at their tonal limits. You may have more luck with the HLG controls but I don’t like the loss of ‘perceptual’ saturation when contrast is added.
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSun Apr 25, 2021 5:11 pm

John Griffin wrote:This is how color management works, yes. You set appropriate input transforms based on what your different footage is (if they differ from default interpreration) and CM moves them all to intermediate colorspace where grading happens. Project and metadata interpretation defaults are just ”use this unless I override it”, not hard fixed ”it is what it is”, sometimes it seems to trip people over. Set your IDTs as appropriate for every clip, changing it manually if needed. In the end, output transforms move data to whatever colorspace you need for display or export.

I have found when working using color management, the lift, gamma, and gain wheels act way differently. Have you experienced this?[/quote]
Yes this is well known. The workaround in ACES is to create an in and out conversion ‘sandwich’ node from ACES to REC709 and back again so all your tonal adjustments using LGG happen in REC709 which is where they are designed to operate. In RCM LGG are unintuitive at best and unusable at worst. BM really needs to fix this as shadow mid and highlight work over very Narrow tonal ranges and are not designed for large tonal shifts as they create ugly artefacts at their tonal limits. You may have more luck with the HLG controls but I don’t like the loss of ‘perceptual’ saturation when contrast is added.[/quote]
I'll take a look at the sandwiching, thanks. Would NR go after the sandwich, before, or somewhere in between the grade? I know sharpening would absolutely go last.
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline

John Paines

  • Posts: 6327
  • Joined: Tue Jul 28, 2015 4:04 pm

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSun Apr 25, 2021 5:23 pm

Trying to sort out the conflicting information you're getting here may not be the best approach. Alexis van Hurkman, who I believe is involved in writing Davinci manuals, has online courses for color management, including the modifications introduced in 17. That may be one place to start. And he's a working colorist. The same may not be true of everyone who offers advice here.

"I heard it on the internet" or "I read it on the BMD forum" may not be the best way to find your way around this complicated subject.
Offline

John Griffin

  • Posts: 1341
  • Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2015 4:18 pm

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostSun Apr 25, 2021 6:31 pm

I do NR, basic color balance and exposure normalisation before the REC709 sandwich in my ACES workflow (which learnt from a 'working colorist'.......)
Offline
User avatar

Alexrocks1253

  • Posts: 271
  • Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2020 9:15 pm
  • Location: Washington, DC
  • Real Name: Alexander Crocker

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostTue Apr 27, 2021 3:23 pm

John Paines wrote:Trying to sort out the conflicting information you're getting here may not be the best approach. Alexis van Hurkman, who I believe is involved in writing Davinci manuals, has online courses for color management, including the modifications introduced in 17. That may be one place to start. And he's a working colorist. The same may not be true of everyone who offers advice here.

"I heard it on the internet" or "I read it on the BMD forum" may not be the best way to find your way around this complicated subject.

Will take a look. Thanks!
Custom PC:
Windows 11
Ryzen 9 5900x
RTX 3080 10GB
32GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM
2TB Samsung M.2 970 Evo Plus
4TB Samsung SATA 860 Evo

Macbook Pro 14" M2 Max 32GB RAM 1TB SSD
Offline
User avatar

sturmen

  • Posts: 110
  • Joined: Mon Jul 29, 2019 3:53 pm
  • Location: New York, NY
  • Real Name: Nicholas Tinsley

Re: Best Log to work with?

PostTue Apr 27, 2021 3:41 pm

John Paines wrote:Trying to sort out the conflicting information you're getting here may not be the best approach. Alexis van Hurkman, who I believe is involved in writing Davinci manuals, has online courses for color management, including the modifications introduced in 17. That may be one place to start. And he's a working colorist. The same may not be true of everyone who offers advice here.

"I heard it on the internet" or "I read it on the BMD forum" may not be the best way to find your way around this complicated subject.


Alexis van Hurkman literally wrote the book on color correction, and was employed by Blackmagic Design as the lead writer on Davinci Resolve's manual for the last 10 years up until he moved to Frame.io almost 2 months ago. When Resolve 17 came out last year (and when that ripple training was released), at the time he was quite literally the source of truth from inside Blackmagic Design to explain to the world how the software works.
MacBook Pro, 14", M4 Max 128GB

Return to DaVinci Resolve

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: panos_mts, Uli Plank and 303 guests