This is a great explanation Ian! I've recently got a very low hr FS5 , and learning S-log shooting. Great info for a newbie and well explained. Cheers Gregg.
hi my footage appears slighting noisy I'm shooting on fs5 s-log 3 gamut.cine at 3200k and 2000 ISO and 1 and half stops overexposing . just wanted to know if it normal to have notable noise on footage . its a night alley scene
Hiya, the older FS5 sensors are not as good in low light as the newer FX3 and FX6 cameras, and don’t have dual Native ISO’s, and the log profiles on the FS5 camera are notorious for having more grain and noise, so yeah In night scenes the S-Log profile from the FS5 will have a lot more noticeable noise. I normally shoot with a Cinegamma profile in low light on the FS5, normally Cine4
This is a great explanation Ian! I've recently got a very low hr FS5 , and learning S-log shooting. Great info for a newbie and well explained.
Cheers Gregg.
Cheers, glad it was helpful mate ☺️
Thank you so much!
Great video!! I appreciate all the detail you put in!
Cool video.. Congrats on the beginning of your youtube journey!😀
Great and informative video buddy!
Great video, well explained
hi my footage appears slighting noisy I'm shooting on fs5 s-log 3 gamut.cine at 3200k and 2000 ISO and 1 and half stops overexposing . just wanted to know if it normal to have notable noise on footage . its a night alley scene
Hiya, the older FS5 sensors are not as good in low light as the newer FX3 and FX6 cameras, and don’t have dual Native ISO’s, and the log profiles on the FS5 camera are notorious for having more grain and noise, so yeah In night scenes the S-Log profile from the FS5 will have a lot more noticeable noise. I normally shoot with a Cinegamma profile in low light on the FS5, normally Cine4