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ALEXA

Visual Effects FAQ


W O R K F L O W G U I D E L I N E

8 December 2014
1. Version History
Version Author Change Note

2012_05_23 Martin First document

2013_03_06 Rdlein Additional wording, LDS, graphics


2013_03_26 ASA Rating
2013_04_17

2014_12_08 Rdlein Update ProRes 4444 XQ, Open Gate

2. Table of Contents

1. Version History .......................................................................................................... 2


2. Table of Contents ...................................................................................................... 2
3. Introduction................................................................................................................ 4
4. What is the right format for shooting green/blue screen shots?.......................... 4
5. What are the recommended codecs when shooting green/blue screen shots? . 4
6. What is the recommended sensor mode when shooting VFX shots? ................. 4
7. Is there a difference between green and blue screens because the ALEXA
camera uses a CMOS sensor? ................................................................................. 5
8. Is tungsten or daylight better for lighting green/blue screen shots?................... 5
9. What is a good aim for brightness of my green/blue screen? .............................. 5
10. What is the best ASA rating for green/blue screen shots? ................................... 5
11. Compositing Software: Adobe After Effects........................................................... 5
How do I import my ARRIRAW files into After Effects ? ........................................... 5
How do I import my ProRes files into After Effects? ................................................. 5
How do view my Log C files in After Effects? ........................................................... 6
12. Compositing Software: Blackmagic Design Fusion .............................................. 6
How do I import my ARRIRAW files into Fusion? ..................................................... 6
How do I import my ProRes files into Fusion? .......................................................... 6
How do I view my Log C files in Fusion? .................................................................. 6
13. Compositing Software: The Foundry Nuke............................................................. 6
How do I import my ARRIRAW files into Nuke? ....................................................... 6
How do I import my ProRes files into Nuke? ............................................................ 6
How do I view my Log C files in Nuke? .................................................................... 6
14. I have problems keying ALEXA footage. What can I do to improve the key
quality? ....................................................................................................................... 7
Linear Color Gamut .................................................................................................. 7
Noise/Grain ............................................................................................................... 7
Film Matrix ................................................................................................................ 7
Sharpening ............................................................................................................... 7
15. How does the ALEXA color processing work? ...................................................... 7
Linear Encoded Data ................................................................................................ 7
Linear from ARRIRAW files ...................................................................................... 7
Linear from Log C files ............................................................................................. 7
Logarithmic Encoded Data ....................................................................................... 8

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Display-Ready Video Encoding Rec 709 Monitors ................................................... 8
16. What is the film-matrix and how do I use it? .......................................................... 8
17. What is the Log C format? ........................................................................................ 8
18. The production used ARRI Look Files on set. Where are these looks stored and
how can I use them in a VFX pipeline? ................................................................... 9
19. Where can I get metadata of the ALEXA from? ...................................................... 9
20. What is LDS metadata? ............................................................................................ 9
21. ARRI Website ........................................................................................................... 10
ALEXA Color Processing ........................................................................................ 10
Log C and Rec 709 ................................................................................................. 10
LDS (Lens Data System) ........................................................................................ 10
22. Contact ..................................................................................................................... 10
23. APPENDIX ................................................................................................................ 11
Waveform: Optimal color separation ...................................................................... 11
Vectorscope: Highest saturaton possible ............................................................... 11
Green screen: Even lighting (max +/- 1/3 stop) ...................................................... 11

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3. Introduction
The ALEXA camera is widely used in feature film and TV work today. This includes a lot of VFX-heavy films
and TV series. This document is intended to help VFX professionals who are new to the ALEXA camera to
answers common questions regarding its workflow, color processing and image quality.
We cover the three most commonly used compositing software packages on the market. If the software you
are using is not dealt with in this document or if you have any further questions regarding VFX and the
ALEXA camera, please feel free to contact us at digitalworkflow@arri.de.

4. What is the right format for shooting green/blue screen shots?


The ALEXA camera offers a multitude on formats for onboard and in-camera recording. ProRes and DNxHD
use lossy compressions. While ProRes offers resolutions up to 2K, DNxHD offers HD resolution only. All
these are compromises which will have an effect on the keyability and quality of a green and blue screen
shot.
While many VFX-heavy productions have successfully used ProRes 4444 and ProRes 4444 XQ for their
VFX work, only ARRIRAW provides the full resolution uncompressed sensor data and therefore the best
choice for VFX work.

5. What are the recommended codecs when shooting green/blue


screen shots?
A lot of productions cannot afford ARRIRAW recording for VFX work and therefore want to use ProRes or
DNxHD recording. If ARRIRAW is not an option, ARRI recommends to only use the highest quality codecs
(ProRes 4444 and ProRes 4444 XQ as well as DNxHD 444) for shooting green and blue screen.

6. What is the recommended sensor mode when shooting VFX shots?


ALEXA s super clean color separation is particularly important for green screen and other VFX work.
Nevertheless sometimes it is important to work with more pixels than used later in the final product
(for gaining more resolution for repositioning, resizing, rotating or stabilizing etc).

In addition to the 16:9 and the 4:3 sensor mode, ALEXA XT cameras are capable of Open Gate sensor
mode (only ALEXA XT cameras are capable of Open Gate mode). In Open Gate sensor mode the whole
area of the sensor (3414 x 2198) is captured; it is only available in ARRIRAW.

Please note that also the 4:3 sensor mode allows to position tracker marks etc in the areas which are not
exposed for 1.85:1 or Cinemascope or to stabilize or reposition vertically without any loss of quality.

.
2880 x 1620 px 2880 x 2160 px 3414 x 2198 px

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7. Is there a difference between green and blue screens because the
ALEXA camera uses a CMOS sensor?
The ALEXA CMOS sensor has twice the number of green photosites than blue photosites; therefore the
resolution of a green screen is higher compared to a blue screen. Also the green channel is less noisy than
the blue channel when using tungsten light. Please also see the next topic.

8. Is tungsten or daylight better for lighting green/blue screen shots?


For a green screen shot neither white point setting has an effect on the green channel gain. Daylight and
tungsten light deliver the same quality.
For a blue screen shot the blue gain used with a 3200K tungsten light is substantially higher than the blue
gain used with a 5600K daylight, and therefore a blue screen captured under tungsten will be more noisy
than a green screen. Daylight light is preferred.

9. What is a good aim for brightness of my green/blue screen?


The brightness of the screen should correspond to the foreground, which needs to be separated.
A good aim is, when the foreground is properly exposed for skin tones 1/3 of a stop above 18% grey, the
screen should read about 1/3 to 2/3 of stop over 18% gray. Please take care that the background is evenly lit
and not underexposed.

10. What is the best ASA rating for green/blue screen shots?
The short answer is: 200-400 ASA.

Here is the long answer: The "base" rating for the ALEXA in general is 800 ASA. When setting the camera to
800 ASA you get 7.4 stops of latitude above middle grey and 6.6 stops below. This gives you a very good
range similar to that of film.

When shooting green or blue screens in a controlled studio environment, often the 7.4 stops above middle
grey are not needed. In a situation like this it could be preferable to set the ALEXA to a lower ASA rating. As
long as the highlights don't get clipped a lower ASA rating will give you less noise in the image.

When looking at a ALEXA image, often the noise/grain is not visible to the eye, but it is visible to a
compositing keyer. Having less noise in the image means that the footage will be easier to key.

11. Compositing Software: Adobe After Effects


How do I import my ARRIRAW files into After Effects ?
ARRIRAW files can be imported into After Effects as of version CS 6. From Adobes website the following
are known issues:
The importer works in 16 bit, so set your project to 16 or 32 bpc.
There is no exposure or color space control in the importer, and no importer options at all.
Footage is always decoded at full resolution, even if a lower frame size is needed.
Metadata is not exposed as XMP, so is not available in After Effects.
Collect Files does not work with ARRIRAW footage.

How do I import my ProRes files into After Effects?

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ProRes files can be imported into Adobe After Effects without any limitation. Just import your ProRes files
like you would import any other footage.

How do view my Log C files in After Effects?


To view Log C footage correctly inside Adobe After Effects, generate a Log C to Video photometric LUT
using ARRIs online LUT Generator and use an Apply Color LUT effect inside AfterEffects.
This only works, when your project is not set to Linearize Working Space.

12. Compositing Software: Blackmagic Design Fusion


How do I import my ARRIRAW files into Fusion?
Fusion has native ARRIRAW support. A standard loader can be used to import ARRIRAW files. For
standard Log C deliverables set the color space to ARRI Wide Gamut (Log C).

How do I import my ProRes files into Fusion?


Fusion has native ProRes support. Use a standard loader to load ALEXA ProRes files into Fusion.

How do I view my Log C files in Fusion?


To view Log C footage correctly inside Fusion, generate a Log C to Video Rec 709 photometric, extended
to extended range LUT using ARRIs online LUT Generator and use a this LUT to view your images.

13. Compositing Software: The Foundry Nuke


How do I import my ARRIRAW files into Nuke?
The Foundry Nuke 7.0 or later has native ARRIRAW support. For older versions your ARRIRAW files need
to be converted beforehand to either DPX or OpenEXR files and import them using the ALEXAV3 importer
color space.
Depending on the desired workflow and deliverables ARRIRAW files can be imported using these two
methods using a standard read node inside Nuke.
for Log C deliverables:
o Set the ARRIRAW color space to Log C ( wide gamut ).
o Set Nukes color space to ALEXAV3LogC.

for ACES deliverables:


o Set the ARRIRAW color space to ACES.
o Set Nukes color space to Linear.
o Use OCIO for setting your workflow to ACES.

How do I import my ProRes files into Nuke?


Nuke has built-in native ProRes support, but as of Nuke 7.0v4, decoding ProRes this way exhibits a
saturation shift when compared to the results of ARRI's reference color processing. ARRI recommends
first converting your ALEXA ProRes files to Log C DPX files outside of Nuke, and then reading those
Log C DPX files into Nuke (using the AlexaV3LogC color space setting at the bottom of the Read node's
properties panel).

How do I view my Log C files in Nuke?


For viewing ALEXA files imported using ALEXAV3LogC import color space it is best to build your own viewer
process using a vector field node. Download a K1S1 photometric 3D LUT from ARRIs online LUT
Generator and activate the LUT in the vector field node using the ALEXAV3LogC for color space in and
Linear for color space out.
When using this viewer process you will get the same preview picture then what the ALEXA renders as an
Rec 709 image.

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14. I have problems keying ALEXA footage. What can I do to improve
the key quality?
Linear Color Gamut
Modern keyers best work when supplied with linearly-encoded images. Working in a linear color space will
most often give better results than working with Log C encoded plates.

Noise/Grain
Most often it is useful to degrain/denoise ALEXA green and blue screen plates. Even when the eye cannot
see any noise present in the image, there will still be noise present that will have an effect on the keying of
these plates.

Film Matrix
The film matrix can in some situations achieve a bigger color separation and therefore make the keying of
some shots easier. In this case the film matrix should only be rendered as a pre-grade step before the keyer
and should not be rendered into the final VFX shot.

Sharpening
In case you are working with ARRIRAW files, you have the chance to set the sharpening value according to
your wishes. This means that you can reduce the sharpening after the debayering and might find that you
can pull a better key. You can use a second pass with increased sharpening for the fill or do a resharpen in
your compositing system. Oversharpened images create a bad key, less sharpened images a better key.

15. How does the ALEXA color processing work?


The ALEXA camera offers three different encodings of the recorded image:
Linear encoding
Logarithmic encoding
Display-ready video encoding for Rec 709 monitors

While ARRIRAW is encoded as linear data. ARRIRAW can be easily converted to the two other encodings
using the ARRIRAWConverter debayer software, or by using other applications which support ARRIRAW.
For ProRes and DNxHD clips the encoding can be logarithmic or video.
ARRI also offers transformation LUTs to convert from the different encodings back and forth. This can not be
done without loss of data. For instance when recording a video Rec 709 encoding to ProRes files, these files
can be converted Log C, but will have lost detail in blacks and whites.

Linear Encoded Data


Linear data is mostly used in VFX processing because it is the natural encoding for computer generated ele-
ments. The ALEXA camera has a dynamic range of 14 stops which corresponds to a linear range of more
than 15,000:1.
In most cases floating point numbers are used to store this range (the OpenEXR image format, for example,
is based on 16 bit floating point numbers).

Linear from ARRIRAW files


The most direct way to linear files is to record ARRIRAW and to process the data with the
ARRIRAWConverter (ARC). Several third party software vendors also support ARRIRAW in their systems.

Linear from Log C files


Another way to obtain linear data is to undo the Log C curve of images recorded on tape or in QuickTime
ProRes 4444 and ProRes 4444 XQ as well as DNxHD 444 files.
ARRIs online lut generator can create LUTs to convert Log C images to linear sensor data. When the Log C
data is converted to linear sensor data, black (corresponding to zero exposure) will be represented by the

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value 256/65535. This sensor black level is the mean of all pixels. Because of read-out noise, single pixels
may be above or below this value. The standard deviation of the read out noise is approximately 2.5
meaning that the offset of 256 is more than high enough to encode the full noise amplitude (usually one
assumes a range of three times the standard deviation or 8 code values).
Using the parameters for linear scene exposure will map the black value, as expected, to 0.0. With the noise,
however, single pixels will come out as negative values. When those values cannot be preserved and one
does not want to clip them, a small offset of 8/65535 should be added to the relative scene exposure factor.
This is equivalent of adding flare to the image data. The amount of flare expressed relative to the scene
white will vary with the exposure index. It ranges from 0.1% (for EI 200) to 0.8% (for EI 3200).
The flare should be subtracted before the images are converted back to Log C.

Logarithmic Encoded Data


The Log C curve was first introduced with the ARRIFLEX D-20 camera. Its an encoding with a transfer
characteristic similar to that of a scan from negative film. Because of the fundamental differences between
digital cameras and negatives, however, the color characteristics remain different. See also the next topic:
16. What is the Log C format?

Display-Ready Video Encoding Rec 709 Monitors


The Rec 709 output of the camera is either used for on-set preview or for when the program is edited for
television without extensive color correction. Those images are displayed without any further transformation.
While this simplifies the post production workflow it reduces the possibilities in color correction. The images
have been tone-mapped and transformed into the target color space.
The tone-map curve is applied to the Log C data. This transform is also available as a LUT for post-
processing of Log C footage. While this provides a nice image on a video monitor, it also means that some
information has been squeezed out of the transformed image. The matrix transform applied immediately
following the tone-map curve results in an image transcoded into the target color space, but if the original
image contained extremely saturated colors, this may also brings a loss of color. If a transformed color is
outside the gamut of the display, it will be mapped or clipped to an in-gamut color.

16. What is the film-matrix and how do I use it?


From SUP 3.0 onwards ARRI offers a film style matrix that can be applied to the Log C output. The same
transform is also available as a 3DLUT for post-processing of Log C footage.
The film style matrix makes the color characteristics of the Log C image similar to negative film scanned on
an ARRISCAN. The matrix is most usefully applied when the data is previewed or converted with a print film
emulation (PFE) . This is the common workflow in Digital Intermediate where the PFE is applied as a 3DLUT
in the display path.
The film-matrix can in some situations achieve a bigger color separation and therefore make the keying of
some shots easier.

17. What is the Log C format?


The Log C curve is a logarithmic encoding for images that is used in the ARRI ALEXA. The encoding has a
transfer characteristic similar to that of a scan from negative film. Because of the fundamental differences
between digital cameras and negatives, however, the color characteristics remain different.
Logarithmic encoding means that the relation between exposure measured in stops and the encoded signal
is constant (straight) over a wide range. Each stop of exposure increases the encoded signal by the same
amount. The slope of this part of the curve is called its gamma. At the bottom the curve has a toe. The toe
accommodates the fact that the sensor cannot see as many distinctions between low light levels as it can at
higher light levels. The resulting overall shape of the curve is similar to the exposure curves of film negatives.
For more detailed information about the Log C format used inside the ALEXA camera you can download
ALEXA Log C Curve Usage in VFX from our downloads page: http://www.arri.com/alexa/downloads .

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18. The production used ARRI Look Files on set. Where are these looks
stored and how can I use them in a VFX pipeline?
Look files that are active in the camera while recording, get recorded as metadata in the file header of
ARRIRAW files, ProRes files and DNxHD files.
An ARRI Look File contains a set of parameters specific to the ALEXA camera. The look files can be
converted into 3D LUT files using the ARRI Online LUT Generator at
http://www.arri.com/camera/digital_cameras/tools/lut_generator.html
A conversion of 3D LUT files into ARRI Look Files, however, is not possible.
The following parameters are part of the ARRI Look File:
Color saturation value (called Saturation)
RGB offsets (called PrinterLight)
A mono free form curve applied to all RGB channels (called ToneMapLut)
The three primitives of the ASC Color Decision List (CDL), separate for each R, G, and B channel
(called SOP Node Slope Offset Power)

ARRIs metadata extract tool can extract the look file inside the file headers.
Please also see the next chapter.

19. Where can I get metadata of the ALEXA from?


The ALEXA camera stores per-frame and per-shot metadata. This metadata is present in all recorded
formats - onboard and in-camera formats ARRIRAW, ProRes, DNxHD. Per shot metadata is also written to
an FinalCut Pro XML file and an AVID AAF when recording to SxS cards.

Please refer to our metadata workflow paper on our download website for more detailed information (ALEXA
Metadata White Paper). On the download page you can also find ARRI META Extract, an extraction tool for
metadata for OS A and Windows http://www.arri.de/EN/camera/alexa/tools/arri_meta_extract/

20. What is LDS metadata?


A part of these metadata is LDS (Lens Data System) information, such as Lens Focus, Lens Focal Length,
Lens Serial Number, Lens Iris. This additional information makes documentation easier as the metadata is
stored within the image files so it cannot get lost, which is a differences to film times, where often the
information collected on location got lost before reaching post production.

LDS information can then be used for easy camera set up, as the values of lens, iris, focal length and focus
point, therefore also depth of field, is available. For recording the LDS data the cameras has to be equipped
with an LDS lens mount and of course with LDS capable lenses. Those are all ARRI/Zeiss Master primes, all
ARRI/Zeiss LDS Ultra Primes, all ARRI/Fujinon Alura Lightweight Zooms. Other lenses can be used when
the Lens Data Archive LDA is activated.
In some VFX software packages the LDS information is displayed. In any case, you can use ARRI META
Extract to extract the data into a csv-file (see 18.).

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21. ARRI Website
Please check out our website. There is a workflow section which gives you a lot of additional information and
we offer different White Papers:.

ALEXA Color Processing


http://www.arri.de/camera/digital_cameras/learn/alexa_color_processing.html

Log C and Rec 709


http://www.arri.de/camera/digital_cameras/learn/log_c_and_rec_709_video.html

LDS (Lens Data System)


http://www.arri.de/camera/digital_cameras/learn/lens_data_system.html

22. Contact
If you have questions or comments please contact our workflow experts: digitalworkflow@arri.de.

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23. APPENDIX
Waveform: Optimal color separation

Vectorscope: Highest saturaton possible

Green screen: Even lighting (max +/- 1/3 stop)

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