Steve is spot on with his post (#14) on the issues with using laser for color grading. While I agree in principle with using a laser projector to judge the results to see how it would match in cinemas, the points he made about different eyes seeing the spectra differently (See Harold's excellent post explaining why) means that the end product could potentially be a huge mess when released to the masses.
My own vision seems to be red deficient, as I always have to have the tint skewed to the red side on all my tv's and monitors. The few laser projected movies I have seen in the past therefore always seem a bit on the green side to me, and were not consistent from one location to another. Is that due to the grading? Variables in which type of laser projector? (I did not bother to ask which type was used at any of the locations, and the popcorn kids wouldn't know anyways.)
Xenon has a full and relatively balanced light spectrum, which is precisely why it is used and preferred over laser for grading.
Bottom line for Tomislav: Find a good xenon projector, used, buy two or more so you have spares (which would most likely still end up cheaper than one NEW laser machine), there are plenty of new xenon lamps still available, stock a few of those (they tend to have a very long shelf life, if not dropped or improperly stored), and call it a day. You will be able to KNOW with confidence that the color rendering will be BALANCED and CONSISTENT, which is your end goal. You will also have less "callbacks" or "do-overs" (or whatever it would be called in post world) and that means less losses and unhappy clients.
AFTER you build the business, invest in a laser projector for side-by-side comparisons for your clients. But remember: since individual people's color spectra differ, what looks great on xenon to a client may not look so good on laser. (The upside is if you have a KNOWLEDGEABLE client, they can suggest some tweaks of specific colors to get the laser looking more like they want. But they may ruin it for the masses in doing so.)
My own vision seems to be red deficient, as I always have to have the tint skewed to the red side on all my tv's and monitors. The few laser projected movies I have seen in the past therefore always seem a bit on the green side to me, and were not consistent from one location to another. Is that due to the grading? Variables in which type of laser projector? (I did not bother to ask which type was used at any of the locations, and the popcorn kids wouldn't know anyways.)
Xenon has a full and relatively balanced light spectrum, which is precisely why it is used and preferred over laser for grading.
Bottom line for Tomislav: Find a good xenon projector, used, buy two or more so you have spares (which would most likely still end up cheaper than one NEW laser machine), there are plenty of new xenon lamps still available, stock a few of those (they tend to have a very long shelf life, if not dropped or improperly stored), and call it a day. You will be able to KNOW with confidence that the color rendering will be BALANCED and CONSISTENT, which is your end goal. You will also have less "callbacks" or "do-overs" (or whatever it would be called in post world) and that means less losses and unhappy clients.
AFTER you build the business, invest in a laser projector for side-by-side comparisons for your clients. But remember: since individual people's color spectra differ, what looks great on xenon to a client may not look so good on laser. (The upside is if you have a KNOWLEDGEABLE client, they can suggest some tweaks of specific colors to get the laser looking more like they want. But they may ruin it for the masses in doing so.)
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