1. Log to rec 709 2.vignette 3.apply film profile 4.expand tool blk/white 5.print 6.film developer 7.film compression tool 8.color head adj 9.film grain 10. Halation 11.bloom Soo all in that order lol TY!
I think what's missing in your marketing isn't the how, it's the why. You've done a good job making Dehancer easy to use, and tuts like this make it even easier to operate; but I think much of your market, myself included, needs some education on the stocks/looks themselves- their histories, common usage scenarios, etc. Which choices great filmmakers and cinematographers make in stocks and/or grading/emulation to achieve certain results, and why. Create a more educated consumer, who can see the value in the specificity and accuracy Dehancer offers, versus more generic "film look" options (like the new thing in Resolve) and they will see more value in purchasing the plugin versus getting more generic results with those other options.
Hi! We are indeed interested in educating our consumer here. Please, check out the ‘Learn’ section on our new and improved website here: www.dehancer.com/learn where we provide a lot of useful information - articles, manual, guides and more.
Here’s a deep dive I made into Dehancer showcasing not just “how’s” but the “why’s” and how I think about the plug-in. th-cam.com/video/jt92QMtG_8w/w-d-xo.html Hope this helps! I can answer any questions.
How does the burden of your lack of knowledge as a DP or colorist rest on the shoulders of a company that is gifting you the world of comprehensive tools not previously available to previous generations of colourists.
@@KaceyBakerFilms They're not "gifting" anything, they're selling a product, and my post was about how to better market that product. I admitted to my lack of knowledge in the post so your gatekeeping is unnecessary and a bit gauche. I bet 95% of Dehancer's customers are amateurs, enthusiasts, or just non-DP/non-colorist video professionals (OMB videographers, editors, content creators, etc) who would benefit from the education I proposed. Which seems like it would improve the general look/quality of their work, and thus that of video production overall to some degree. Would that be a bad thing?
Cijenimo to što radite, čini se da privlačite publiku, sve ide dobro, hvala autoru što ste nam dali ove trenutke, njegujte ove trenutke, pozdrav iz Vijetnama
And yes, we did it at 0:20. We are delivering tons of information, demos and tutorials to learn more about our tool and master it with any source from top cinema camera to mobile video. Please read Page 11 of our official PDF Quick Guide: www.dehancer.com/learn/manuals Useful pipelines for DVR: www.dehancer.com/learn/article/davinci-resolve-node-sequence Also read Part 2. Source Interpretation: www.dehancer.com/learn/article/contrast-clipping ‘Workflows’ section also contains basic pipelines, from source to delivery.
Love Dehancer, but please simply let us rearrange the toolset to reflect a workflow like this, or our own variations. Supposedly the tool order can’t be changed because it may ruin the flow of operations, but this video totally negates that explanation, and I’m left making a recommended-order-of-operations list in Apple notes 🤪. Free the toolsets! Cheers
@@Dehancer Wish I had seen that, woulda saved me some typing lol - appreciate you much! It’d seriously be awesome to just be able to slide the panels into that order for a much better/easier user experience tho, and not have to consult that list. Color grading can already be massively technical (especially when you combine it with all the other media-creation plates we all struggle to spin lol). Easier is much more joyful! Please think about it 😎 Cheers
1. Log to rec 709
2.vignette
3.apply film profile
4.expand tool blk/white
5.print
6.film developer
7.film compression tool
8.color head adj
9.film grain
10. Halation
11.bloom
Soo all in that order lol TY!
I think what's missing in your marketing isn't the how, it's the why. You've done a good job making Dehancer easy to use, and tuts like this make it even easier to operate; but I think much of your market, myself included, needs some education on the stocks/looks themselves- their histories, common usage scenarios, etc. Which choices great filmmakers and cinematographers make in stocks and/or grading/emulation to achieve certain results, and why. Create a more educated consumer, who can see the value in the specificity and accuracy Dehancer offers, versus more generic "film look" options (like the new thing in Resolve) and they will see more value in purchasing the plugin versus getting more generic results with those other options.
Hi! We are indeed interested in educating our consumer here.
Please, check out the ‘Learn’ section on our new and improved website here: www.dehancer.com/learn where we provide a lot of useful information - articles, manual, guides and more.
Here’s a deep dive I made into Dehancer showcasing not just “how’s” but the “why’s” and how I think about the plug-in.
th-cam.com/video/jt92QMtG_8w/w-d-xo.html
Hope this helps! I can answer any questions.
How does the burden of your lack of knowledge as a DP or colorist rest on the shoulders of a company that is gifting you the world of comprehensive tools not previously available to previous generations of colourists.
@@KaceyBakerFilms They're not "gifting" anything, they're selling a product, and my post was about how to better market that product. I admitted to my lack of knowledge in the post so your gatekeeping is unnecessary and a bit gauche. I bet 95% of Dehancer's customers are amateurs, enthusiasts, or just non-DP/non-colorist video professionals (OMB videographers, editors, content creators, etc) who would benefit from the education I proposed. Which seems like it would improve the general look/quality of their work, and thus that of video production overall to some degree. Would that be a bad thing?
I agree with your opinion. I wish dehancer would be more specific than listing it out like a dictionary.
Dehancer is a game changer, multiple tools in one. Is the type of tool I dream since I was a kid taking my first filmmaking steps.
Thank you for the support! Cheers!
Cijenimo to što radite, čini se da privlačite publiku, sve ide dobro, hvala autoru što ste nam dali ove trenutke, njegujte ove trenutke, pozdrav iz Vijetnama
Thank you!
很详细的介绍了这款胶片模拟的插件使用方法,dehancer pro非常优秀的一款多平台插件。非常不错。❤❤❤
Thank you!
Great tutorial!
Thank you so much!
Is it possible to get support for Blender?
No plans to do it just yet.
Aren't you supposed to choose your camera on the source?
And yes, we did it at 0:20. We are delivering tons of information, demos and tutorials to learn more about our tool and master it with any source from top cinema camera to mobile video.
Please read Page 11 of our official PDF Quick Guide: www.dehancer.com/learn/manuals
Useful pipelines for DVR:
www.dehancer.com/learn/article/davinci-resolve-node-sequence
Also read Part 2. Source Interpretation:
www.dehancer.com/learn/article/contrast-clipping
‘Workflows’ section also contains basic pipelines, from source to delivery.
❤💯
Love Dehancer, but please simply let us rearrange the toolset to reflect a workflow like this, or our own variations. Supposedly the tool order can’t be changed because it may ruin the flow of operations, but this video totally negates that explanation, and I’m left making a recommended-order-of-operations list in Apple notes 🤪. Free the toolsets! Cheers
Hey! We are breaking down whole workflow in the description. Please, check it ou!
@@Dehancer Wish I had seen that, woulda saved me some typing lol - appreciate you much! It’d seriously be awesome to just be able to slide the panels into that order for a much better/easier user experience tho, and not have to consult that list. Color grading can already be massively technical (especially when you combine it with all the other media-creation plates we all struggle to spin lol). Easier is much more joyful! Please think about it 😎
Cheers
@@eversparx Will pass it on to the team.
@ Awesome - Thank you! Love Dehancer either way, but would love it just a lil’ more if it had sliding blocks lol. Cheers
A.I. voiceover; ugh