Josh Petok August 29, 2016 Share August 29, 2016 (edited) Here's a tutorial I posted a while back, but it's still very useful today: Creating areas of light and shadow are no problem with DaVinci Resolve. PowerWindows, polygons, or curves can be a colorist's best friend when controlling where you want areas of contrast. The only thing that limits you is the simplicity of the shapes. When shooting on set, a pattern or "gobo" can be placed in front of a light source to create shapes. We can use the same technique in Resolve by using external mattes. In this tutorial I will show how to create more intricate shadows or highlights that can make your images more moody or suggest location. LINKS: Directory of Gam Patterns: bit.ly/gampatterns Images used in this tutorial: bit.ly/noirpatterns image courtesy of Marta Colpani: flickr.com/photos/martacolpani/4934952722/ Noir Shadows and Highlights with DaVinci Resolve-HD.mp4Fetching info... Edited August 29, 2016 by Josh Petok 6 Link to comment Share on other sites
Virgil Edward August 30, 2016 Share August 30, 2016 This is pretty good! Thanks for this! Never thought about using mattes as stylizing tools in grading. Link to comment Share on other sites
Tom Evans August 30, 2016 Share August 30, 2016 Hi @Virgil Edward! It's pretty common to use techniques like this to shape the image in compositing, but it's nice to see that more of these tasks can be performed in the grading systems. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites
Paul Wolf September 1, 2016 Share September 1, 2016 thanks a lot for the tutorial @Josh Petok Link to comment Share on other sites
Bruno Mansi September 4, 2016 Share September 4, 2016 Tiffen have a plugin called 'Light' which does exactly this. I think it was originally a Photoshop plugin, but now it's included in some of their plugin sets for OFX. The sets aren't particularly cheap, but if you're feeling lazy and you've got money burning a hole in your pocket, the plugin includes a library of over 1300 gobos for you. This link describes the filter in more detail: http://software.tiffen.com/products/dft-products/light Link to comment Share on other sites
Nicolas Hanson September 4, 2016 Share September 4, 2016 Nice, I will check that out! Link to comment Share on other sites
Bruno Mansi September 4, 2016 Share September 4, 2016 In case anyone's interested, a number of years ago, I was working on an Avid system which had this plugin installed. I was grading a short scene where two people were talking to each other in a London street. One person was shot in sunlight, but by the time they'd shot the other person, the sun had gone behind some clouds. By using the Light plugin and a soft, leaf shaped gobo, I was able to improve continuity by making it seem as if the second person was under a tree, with sunlight casting shadows on his face and body. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites
Marc Wielage December 29, 2018 Share December 29, 2018 New link for the Tiffen "Light" plug-in, which is now run separately from Tiffen by DFT directly: http://www.digitalfilmtools.com/light/ Link to comment Share on other sites
Bruno Mansi December 30, 2018 Share December 30, 2018 On 12/29/2018 at 5:12 AM, Marc Wielage said: New link for the Tiffen "Light" plug-in, which is now run separately from Tiffen by DFT directly: http://www.digitalfilmtools.com/light/ Expand Isn't this version just for stills? In the 'requirements' tab, it only shows Photoshop, Lightroom etc. No mention of OFX Link to comment Share on other sites
Marc Wielage December 31, 2018 Share December 31, 2018 On 12/30/2018 at 9:31 AM, Bruno Mansi said: Isn't this version just for stills? In the 'requirements' tab, it only shows Photoshop, Lightroom etc. No mention of OFX Expand The Video/Film tab takes you to a different page, which says: Gobo library for lighting effects includes 751 gobos categorized into Abstract, Doors, Elements, Foliage, Snowflakes, Textures and Windows groups and: The DFT video/film plug-in is licensed on a per host basis. You can choose from: Adobe After Effects/Premiere Pro, Apple Final Cut Pro X/Motion, Avid Editing Systems, OFX hosts or a Multi-Host license which will run all video/film and OFX hosts on the same machine. Link to comment Share on other sites
cameronrad December 31, 2018 Share December 31, 2018 On 12/31/2018 at 6:48 AM, Marc Wielage said: The Video/Film tab takes you to a different page, which says: Gobo library for lighting effects includes 751 gobos categorized into Abstract, Doors, Elements, Foliage, Snowflakes, Textures and Windows groups and: The DFT video/film plug-in is licensed on a per host basis. You can choose from: Adobe After Effects/Premiere Pro, Apple Final Cut Pro X/Motion, Avid Editing Systems, OFX hosts or a Multi-Host license which will run all video/film and OFX hosts on the same machine. Expand That's for DFT. http://www.digitalfilmtools.com/dft/ On 12/29/2018 at 5:12 AM, Marc Wielage said: New link for the Tiffen "Light" plug-in, which is now run separately from Tiffen by DFT directly: http://www.digitalfilmtools.com/light/ Expand You posted a link for Light. http://www.digitalfilmtools.com/light/ Light doesn't work for video/film applications. These filters do however: Link to comment Share on other sites
Marc Wielage December 31, 2018 Share December 31, 2018 Tiffen abandoned their partnership with DFT and allowed DFT to take it over completely. They're the same filters, just without the Tiffen name on them. And the "Light" patterns are part of it. Link to comment Share on other sites
cameronrad January 1, 2019 Share January 1, 2019 (edited) On 12/31/2018 at 11:37 PM, Marc Wielage said: Tiffen abandoned their partnership with DFT and allowed DFT to take it over completely. They're the same filters, just without the Tiffen name on them. And the "Light" patterns are part of it. Expand Yea, you still linked to the wrong product. For video you should be linking people to the DFT suite which includes a light plugin, but for video. Linking to the Light plugin product page takes them to a product that only works with still applications Edited January 1, 2019 by cameronrad Link to comment Share on other sites