Mastering Color Temperature in 3 Steps

Color Grading - - get 10% off Dehancer using ROBELLIS at checkout - support me on Patreon for Discord access and early, extended, ad-free YouTube videos GRAB MY LIGHTING COURSE “RECREATING DAYLIGHT“ ON SHOP MOMENT - - Get 15% off your monthly or yearly Flim subscription here! - download the full 46 minute Lighting with Colour mini course ad-free, with all 5 individual parts for just £15 - including an exclusive Part 3! - click the link and use my code “ROBELLIS“ for a free month of fantastic unlimited music when you sign up for Audiosocket! - get up to 78% off yearly plans when you build your website with Zyro using my deal, including an extra 4 months for free and a free domain for a year! Breaking color temperature down into 3 different styles of shot: Recreation, Modification and Exaggeration. By thinking about most any shot in this way, you may be able to better visualise and implement the desired visual language of the shot/scene/film you’re shooting; Recreation allows us to create something very realistic, right down to how a certain location looks in reality at a certain time of day. Modification allows us to add temperatures into a scene that exist in reality, but don’t necessarily exist in the space we’re shooting. Exaggeration lets us create a combination of temperatures that we might not ever see with our own eyes - but still exist. This is just one aspect of what can contribute toward a cinematic feeling - check out the other episodes in the Lighting for Cinema A - Z series to learn more about what makes cinema feel a certain way: Lenses used: Samyang 14mm t/3.1 VDSLR MK2 Samyang 24mm t/1.5 VDSLR MK2 Samyang 35mm t/1.5 VDSLR MK2 Samyang 50mm t/1.5 VDSLR MK2 Cameras used: Panasonic Lumix S5 Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 6K Pro (BTS) Lights used in the video: Nanlite Pavoslim 120C Nanlite Pavoslim 240C Nanlite FC-60B Nanlite Forza 500B II Nanlite Forza 720B Nanlite Forza 60C Nanlite Pavobulb 10C Video Contents: 0:00 Intro 0:47 Recreation 3:24 Modification 10:21 Making Sense of Color Temperature
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