Don't forget that what Ron said assumes that all of your inputs are being properly linearized when read into Nuke. If you're bypassing the linearization in Nuke by reading gamma corrected images as RAW or as linear images for some reason, then rendering using the standard Cineon LUT (or most LUTs for what is worth) will in fact "double" the gamma on your rendered images.
On 22/12/2011, at 11:15, Ron Ganbar <[email protected]> wrote: > When choosing a filename for the Write with the .cin or .dpx extension Nuke > knows to render out a cineon file. This, by default (and unless you changed > this in the Project Settings panel), will do a lin to log for you, so you > don't have to worry about it. > If the ColorSpace property is showing "Cineon" then you are fine. > > Ron Ganbar > email: [email protected] > tel: +44 (0)7968 007 309 [UK] > +972 (0)54 255 9765 [Israel] > url: http://ronganbar.wordpress.com/ > > > > On 22 December 2011 15:09, Mahesh Kumar <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi all, > > we rendered sequence in dpx format in 2k for film, > > > my query is do we need to render the final file with lin to log node or > with out that is ok > > plz suggest me > > thanks > > _______________________________________________ > Nuke-users mailing list > [email protected], http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/ > http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users > > _______________________________________________ > Nuke-users mailing list > [email protected], http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/ > http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users
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