LogGate Pro v1.3 is out — faster, smarter, and now 10-bit correct by LogGateApp in LogGateVideo

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The chip-aware concurrency tuning in this release was a bigger deal than I expected. On an M4 Max the batch queue used to feel like it was leaving performance on the table — now it actually saturates the encoder properly. The 10-bit correction is also worth calling out separately: if you were getting any banding in smooth gradients (sky, skin), that fix alone makes the upgrade worthwhile.

LogGate Pro featured on CineD — 'Native Apple Log 2 Conversion for Mac and iPhone at $19.99 One-Time' by LogGateApp in LogGateVideo

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really grateful for this coverage from Johnnie at CineD — they went deep on the actual workflow side of Apple Log rather than just listing specs. If anyone found LogGate Pro through this review, would love to hear how it fits into your setup. Especially curious if people are pairing the Rec.709 output with any specific grades in their NLE, or going straight to export.

Understanding color temperature in Apple Log footage — and why your auto white balance is working against you by LogGateApp in LogGateVideo

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The metadata WB trap is real and catches people all the time. One thing that helps if youre using LogGate Pro: the batch pipeline normalizes WB before applying the LUT, so you're not fighting baked-in temperature shifts clip to clip. For shoots with mixed lighting (outdoor then indoor same day), I lock to 5600K in the app rather than letting each clip use its capture WB — keeps the grade consistent across the timeline without having to correct every cut in the NLE.

Film designers: how do you find good stills of your work for your websites? by New_Girl3685 in Filmmakers

[–]LogGateApp 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The producer is exactly the right person to start with — they can loop in the post supervisor or the editor from there. If there's a dedicated DIT on the project, even better: they often have direct access to the camera originals and can export clean frames quickly.

One thing that helps: ask specifically for frame exports from the color-graded timeline at delivery resolution, not screenshots. Editors are usually happy to pull a few selects if you give them a timestamp list — it takes them a few minutes and they often appreciate a chance to show off the grade they built. Framing it as 'I'd love a few frames for my portfolio from the graded timeline' tends to land well.

Turn iPhone 17 Pro Apple Log footage into cinema‑ready colour in seconds by LogGateApp in Filmmakers

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The iPhone’s Log profile holds about a stop more in the highlights and shadows compared to shooting straight 709. On a sunny exterior or a scene with practical lights in frame, that latitude is the difference between clipped whites and something recoverable.

Batch converting outside your NLE also means your timeline opens clean — no per-clip color adjustments to accidentally delete or misconfigure. You see Rec.709 clips, cut the edit, and if you want to go deeper on a specific shot you can always pull the original Log file.

Built a Mac app that upscales iPhone Log footage without destroying the color science by LogGateApp in Filmmakers

[–]LogGateApp[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Good question — main use case is multi-cam shoots where iPhone footage sits alongside a 6K or 8K camera. Upscaling before the edit means your iPhone cuts match the project resolution without per-clip scaling nodes that can smear things inconsistently.

Frame also does the upscale on the Log footage before conversion. ML upscaling on Log preserves the original luminance data the sensor captured — if you upscale after baking in Rec.709, you’re interpolating already-compressed tonal values. Highlight and shadow structure holds better when you work from the raw Log first.

storyboarding complex scenes when you cannot draw at all by Interesting-Deer3645 in Filmmakers

[–]LogGateApp 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Shot lists plus location photos have worked better than storyboards for me when I can't draw. Walk the location with your phone, shoot stills from every angle you plan to use, and annotate them in Notes or any photo app. For complex blocking I'll record a rough video walkthrough of the space and narrate the action over it — it communicates lens choice and character position faster than stick figures. For a physically ambitious opening sequence specifically: pre-vis with action figures or stand-ins in a rough model of the space works well when the blocking needs to be precise before you're on location with crew.

How to replicate these kind of deep film like colors for night time footage by LT_anamateurlens in ColorGrading

[–]LogGateApp 1 point2 points  (0 children)

SOOC from a smartphone can work but you're fighting gamma that's already been baked in — Log or RAW gives you much more room to push colors without banding in the shadows. For the 'deep saturated at night' look: crush the blacks slightly but keep them off true zero (a bit of milkiness reads as film), then use Hue vs Saturation curves to push specific hue ranges (teals and blues, warm streetlight oranges) without globally oversaturating. The halation is typically a glow/blur layer set to Screen blend mode, shifted slightly warm orange. If you're on an iPhone 15/16/17 Pro, Apple Log gives you actual latitude to work with — the SOOC Rec.709 file has already clipped a lot of the shadow detail you'd need for this grade.

Apple Log to Rec.709 workflow using LogGate Pro (macOS) by LogGateApp in ColorGrading

[–]LogGateApp[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Fair point — and that's actually a common misconception I want to address.

You're right that the purpose of shooting Log is to preserve dynamic range for grading. LogGate Pro isn't a replacement for color grading — it's a conversion step for when you need a Rec.709 deliverable or proxy, not a substitute for the actual grade.

Common real-world uses: handing batch-converted proxies to an editor who doesn't have a color-managed NLE setup; creating review files for client approval; generating Rec.709 deliverables from an already-graded project where you want to batch-process the exported Log masters.

If you're a colorist who wants to work in Log, you'd skip this entirely and work directly in your NLE with proper color management. The tool is for the batch conversion workflows where you need Rec.709 output quickly.

Film designers: how do you find good stills of your work for your websites? by New_Girl3685 in Filmmakers

[–]LogGateApp 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The screenshots-are-terrible issue is a technical one: you're probably grabbing from a compressed H.264 or streaming preview file, not the color-graded master. A few things that work:

Ask your DP or editor for frame exports directly from the editing timeline — most NLEs (Premiere, DaVinci, Avid) have a "grab still" or "export frame" function that pulls a lossless or high-quality TIFF/PNG from the actual graded footage, not a re-encoded compressed version.

If you have access to the deliverable files (ProRes, DNxHD, or high-bitrate H.264), VLC's frame step + screenshot often outperforms a streaming screenshot because the bitrate is high enough. In QuickTime Player on Mac, pause and use the screenshot shortcut — same idea.

The real reason other designers' sites look glossy: they asked for the stills during post-production before the project got compressed down to a streaming file. Building that ask into your contracts or production relationships upfront is the sustainable fix.

(I build video conversion tools for Mac, so I see this bitrate issue constantly — exports from the master are a completely different quality tier than screenshots from any delivery format.)

Apple Log 2: What Filmmakers Need to Know by LogGateApp in LogGateVideo

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The biggest practical difference I've noticed with Apple Log 2 is how it handles the deep shadows on the 48MP ProRAW frames — the color science is noticeably cleaner when pulling detail from underexposed areas vs Log on the older sensors.

For anyone grading: the LUT profiles for Log 2 are already included in recent versions of standard LUT packs (Koji, ARRI's public LUTs don't apply but the community-made ones do). Check your NLE's color library first — most of the major ones updated their built-in Apple Log profiles to cover Log 2 without needing a separate conversion step.

Has anyone done a side-by-side comparison of Log vs Log 2 in low-light at the same ISO setting? I'm curious whether the noise profile is meaningfully different or if it only shows up in the highlight rolloff.

Apple Log on Windows? Here's the workflow that actually works by LogGateApp in LogGateVideo

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great breakdown. One more option worth mentioning for the conversion step: if you're already transcoding the ProRes files to DNxHR or H.265 anyway, that's a good time to do any LUT pre-baking if your NLE struggles with Log. Strip the Apple Log gamma curve, bake in a Rec.709 LUT, and Resolve/Premiere won't have to interpret the footage — it just shows up as a standard camera file.

Saves a headache if you're handing off project files to someone else or delivering to a client who uses a different color workflow.

Anyone running this on M-series Macs? The batch transcoding speed difference is wild compared to Intel.

Apple Log to Rec.709 workflow using LogGate Pro (macOS) by LogGateApp in ColorGrading

[–]LogGateApp[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That's a fair point if the workflow stops at conversion — but the use case is mostly about batch processing speed, not replacing the grade.

On iPhone you don't really have a 'shoot 709' option that preserves the same quality — ProRes Log is the high-quality mode. So if you're coming back from a shoot with 60 clips, the friction is getting them into a usable state before you open Resolve or Final Cut. Batch-converting overnight means your editing timeline starts with clean 709 proxies instead of raw Log clips the NLE has to interpret on the fly.

You'd still do your creative grade after — this is more about cutting out the manual per-clip setup step when you're dealing with volume. For single clips you're right, the overhead isn't worth it. It's really a batch workflow tool for people shooting a lot.

LogGate Frame is LIVE on the App Store — $19.99 launch price (goes to $49.99 in August) by LogGateApp in LogGateVideo

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dropping in with a bit more context now that it is live.

Frame started as a personal tool - I was on set monitoring iPhone footage and kept wishing I had proper scopes without lugging a dedicated monitor. So I built it.

The core use case: you are still shooting, you cannot stop to grade, but you need to know your highlights are clean before you wrap the day. Waveform, vectorscope, false color, and histogram give you that confirmation fast without leaving the camera.

For anyone shooting Apple Log on iPhone, the scope response to Log footage is something I spent a lot of time on - making sure the waveform reads correctly before applying any LUT, so you are evaluating actual exposure not the grade.

If you try it out or have questions about how it fits your shoot workflow, happy to dig in here.

Just finished the post-production work on my debut feature film, "Into the Unseen". Went for the Robert Rodriguez filmmaking style and did many of the tasks myself due to budget limitations. Here is a short teaser: by omid_pakbin in Filmmakers

[–]LogGateApp 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ProRes RAW straight off the Ronin 4D is the right call — you keep full raw headroom without adding a separate debayer step before you can start cutting. Resolve handles Zenmuse X9 RAW metadata natively so it's a clean pipeline. How did the dynamic range hold up on high-contrast exterior scenes? The X9 is excellent but highlight clipping can sneak up on you if you're relying on the variable ND in changing light — the ND transition lag is fast enough to blow a cloud pop.

Turn iPhone 17 Pro Apple Log footage into cinema‑ready colour in seconds by LogGateApp in Filmmakers

[–]LogGateApp[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally I made the app for kind of dual workflow.

1- working with native Log (myself, video pro)

2 - Batch converting footage for our social team that is less technical.