Use scope boxes to control the extents of datum elements and cropping of views. The datums from the other wing of the building are no longer visible. In the dialog, set the override to Invisible in the view where you do not want to see the scope box or the datum elements assigned to the scope box. Select a scope box, and on the Properties palette, for the Views Visible property, click Edit. To clean up the grids in each view, you can override the visibility of the scope boxes. The Orientation property of the view is set to By Scope Box. In this case, the view is also rotated to align the view crop with the application frame. Apply a scope box to the view of the angled wing in a similar way. Turn off the visibility of the crop region on the View Control Bar.
you MUST get control over is signal levels - full range data vs. The view crop is adjusted to the boundary of the scope box. Getting a blackmagic hdlink and ultrascope for my 2nd workstation seems a. Activate the horizontal dependent view, and on the Properties palette, set the scope box to Main Building. Īpply a scope box to a view to control the view crop. In a similar way, assign the grids for the angled wing to the other scope box. The scope box now controls the 3D extents of the grids, and the 2D extents are adjusted away from the scope box boundary, based on a predefined offset. In the view, you see a change to the extents of the grids. On the Properties palette, assign the grids to the Main Building scope box. In this example, select the grids of the horizontal wing. Now, assign the grids to the scope boxes.
Create another scope box in a similar way, and then rotate and position it around the angled wing of the building. Click to place the scope box around the horizontal wing of the building. If desired, name the scope box on the Options Bar. The scope boxes will make it easier to read the views and understand where the grids of the two wings intersect. We will create and assign scope boxes to control the views of each wing of the building. In this project, there are 2 wings to the building, at angles to one another. When you apply a scope box to a view, the crop region of the view is controlled by the boundary of the scope box. When you assign a grid or a level to a scope box, the 3D extent of the datum element is set to and controlled by the boundary of the scope box. Just looking to see if I can improve my process and results, even if just slightly, from just going by eye to an objective measurement without unreasonable expenditures (I have decimator, can get SD-SDI scope on eBay for $100).To control the visibility of datum elements (grids and levels) and crop regions of views, use scope boxes. With the newer HD cameras and CCU's I don't often have to do as much as I used to w/ SD, but there's still always a slight black or RGB adjustment to be made from camera to camera. My typical methodology for no scoping it is to white and black balance all cameras on the same source, then pick the one I think is the closest and split screen the other cameras on my PGM monitor and try to match it by eye. Most of what I do is IMAG anyways, so there is no fixing it in post, it needs to be close now. Obviously you would lose information in the down convert, but I would think if the center of the shot is your focus it wouldn't matter right? I mean if it's in the same color space (HD and SD SDI are both 4:2:2 YCbCr, and 3G can be as well) color information would be the same right? At least for a good enough comparison.