You can’t make document adjustments more convenient than editing your LOG files online. With DocHub, you can get instruments to edit documents in fillable PDF, LOG, or other formats: highlight, blackout, or erase document elements. Add textual content and images where you need them, rewrite your copy entirely, and more. You can save your edited file to your device or submit it by email or direct link. You can also convert your documents into fillable forms and ask others to complete them. DocHub even offers an eSignature that allows you to certify and deliver paperwork for signing with just a few clicks.
Your records are safely kept in our DocHub cloud, so you can access them anytime from your desktop, laptop, smartphone, or tablet. If you prefer to use your mobile phone for file editing, you can easily do it with DocHub’s app for iOS or Android.
Today weamp;#39;re gonna be talking about the differences between log footage and linear footage when it comes to grading, and why just adding contrast and saturation to log footage usually isnamp;#39;t enough to get an accurate image. Letamp;#39;s get undone. [offbeat music] ♪ Gerald Undone ♪ ♪ Heamp;#39;s crazy ♪ Whatamp;#39;s happening, everybody? Iamp;#39;m Gerald Undone, and I perceive the world with 18% grey. So, I already made a previous video demonstrating how to match the colours from different cameras, and also how to manipulate your curves to take the log footage from different cameras and turn it into sort of a neutral, accurate standard. And while that video was well-received, many of you asked if we could take a more beginner look at log and how to correct it a bit more easily. So thatamp;#39;s what weamp;#39;re gonna do today. And for the more advanced colourists out there, I ask that you excuse some of the oversimplifications that weamp;#39;re going to use in t