Blackmagic Design DV/RES/BBPNLMIC DaVinci Resolve Micro Panel with Resolve Studio Software

User Manual - Page 2593

For DV/RES/BBPNLMIC.

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Black Offset Explained
Of all the Global controls, the Black Offset control is one of the most deceptively important. Black
Offset lets you define the darkest pixels of the image. Adjustments made to Black Offset do not offset
the entire signal, they only affect the very darkest portion of the signal, letting you raise or lower the
black point of the image while smoothly blending the resulting adjustment into the unadjusted portion
of the image. The result is that you can compress or expand the bottom of your signal.
If you raise Black Offset, you can add “flaring” to the image, similarly to how light flaring within a lens
might lighten the darkest part of the image.
(Left) The original image, (Right) Raising Black Offset in order to add flaring to the darkest pixels of the image
Alternately, you can lower Black Offset to lower the very darkest pixels in the image. If the source
image is dark enough, this control can lower the darkest pixels below 0, however this image detail is
preserved in the color image processing pipeline
The most important thing to understand about this control is that level to which you set Black Offset
becomes the new level at which Global exposure adjustments are made. In the following example, the
first image shows the original color of a clip that was exposed to be dark. In the second image, Black
Offset is adjusted to raise the darkest parts of the image, compressing them relative to the midtones
and introducing a pleasing flaring effect to the shadows.
(Left) The original image; (Right) The image with Black Offset raised
In the following image, Global Exposure is raised, and you can see in the Waveform scope that the
exposure change stretches the contrast of the image up, with the darkest pixels “locked” to the Black
Offset you set.
(Left) Before, (Right) After raising Global Exposure to stretch image contrast out from the Black Offset level;
notice that the bottom of the signal continues “touching” the same level after global exposure is raised.
Chapter 129HDR Palette 2593
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