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Aperture

Date post: 26-Feb-2016
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Aperture. Opening in the lens Aperture f-number or stop = focal length/Aperture diameter Each stop represents either half or double the amount of light exposing the film or chip. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Aperture Opening in the lens Aperture f-number or stop = focal length/Aperture diameter Each stop represents either half or double the amount of light exposing the film or chip
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Page 1: Aperture

Aperture Opening in the lens

Aperture

f-number or stop

= focal length/Aperture diameter

Each stop represents either half or double the amount of light exposing the film or chip

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The circle of confusion is defined as the largest blur spot that is indistinguishable from the point source that is being rendered. Stated more simply, it is the limit at which we start noticing that things are getting blurry.  Based on this definition, the circle of confusion should more appropriately be called the circle of “maximum” confusion (or “least” confusion if you are a glass half full person).

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Where to Focus If you are focused on

a subject you will have roughly twice as much depth of field behind the subject than in front of it

A rule of thumb when shooting is to focus on the subject one third the distance from the closer to the farther object

where to focus

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Exposure Range/Contrast Range Our eyes adjust to scenes

way better than video

In video you have to either choose between detail in the shadows or detail in the highlight area

Video anywhere between 5 to 45 stops of contrast range

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GAMMA SETTING Was used to compensate for the difference

between a CRT monitors which were incapable of linear image reproduction—in which output brightness was directly proportional to input signal level. Gamma was needed so that shadow areas wouldn’t be too dark and bright areas wouldn’t wash out

This isn’t necessary with digital monitors Gamma curves can be used to capture a greater

range of scene brightness than was possible in analog

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Gamma In photography and motion picture film gamma is a number that expresses the

contrast of a recorded image as compared to an actual scene 1:1 contrast would be if the scene was re-created perfectly .55:1 Motion Picture Negative 2:1 is the final projection—twice what is seen in nature In video gamma can be used as a creative tool to capture a greater range of a scene High gamma setting: Can compress and stretch the blacks Low gamma setting can create a super high contrast image

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Contrast: Gamma

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Adjusting the knee

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Histogram

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Waveform Monitor

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Reflective vs. Incident Light Meter

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Gray Card

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Pixels and Resolution The digital video frame is made up of a lattice or grid of pixels HD Formats have a higher resolution (more pixels) Our ability to judge resolution is related to how large the image appears How big is the screen? From how far away are you viewing it? In most living room viewing conditions consumers can’t always see the difference

between 1080p and 720p In theatrical distribution it is debatable whether audiences can see a difference

between 1080p 2k about 2048X1080 and 1080p 4k 4096X2160. This depends on the screen size and the audience member’s distance from the screen

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Bit Depth Resolution can be improved by measuring the brightness of each pixel more

precisely Eight bit systems can distinguish between 256 different brightness values for

each pixel 256 shades of red, green and blue—millions of colors 16 bit systems yield 65,536 gradations of each color. The more gradations,

the finer the detail. Greater bit depth allows better color correction and the ability to recover

shadow and highlight detail.

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Resolution and Sharpness The resolution of a video image refers to its ability to

reproduce fine detail. Often this allows an image to look sharp to the eye.

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Different formats Quicktime: Apple MPEG-4: container file format from Quicktime. H.264 Windows Media: Microsoft container format MXF: Material Exchange Format: Used in cameras and editing systems AAF and OMF: Advanced Authoring Format: open exchange between different applications

or systems XML Interchange format: a tool used to describe data using plain text, so that it can be

transferred from one NLE to another DPX: Digital Picture exchange is a nonproprietary container file for uncompressed images

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Data Exchange A digital movie file is made up of video audio and

metadata packaged inside a container or wrapper The video may be uncompressed or compressed with

one of many possible codecs H.264, DV, DVCPRO, HD

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Artifacts A compression artifact (or artefact) is a noticeable

distortion of media (including images, audio, and video) caused by the application of lossy data compression.

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What is Moiré Moiré pattern occurs when a

scene or an object that is being photographed contains repetitive details (such as lines, dots, etc) that exceed the sensor resolution. As a result, the camera produces a strange-looking wavy pattern as seen

Read more: http://photographylife.com/what-is-moire#ixzz2hFKzfPFsLooks like vibrating of the actual image

A mathematical error that occurs when you are down sampling—not using all of the sensor

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Compression intraframe: Compressing within a frame: DCT: discrete

cosine transform or wavelet Interframe: compresses several frames in a group

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Constant and Variable Bit Rates CBR VBR: efficient data It provides more data when you

need it and less when you don’t. This can result in fewer artifacts and smaller file sizes.

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