Evolve Opens Virtual Production Training Lab in Atlanta

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Mon, 04/11/2022 - 11:13 -- Nick Dager

Evolve Technology has opened an Evolve CX (customer experience) space in Atlanta. Evolve CX is a technology laboratory aimed at education and training specifically for the virtual production market, where professionals can gain valuable hands-on experience and creative studios can develop and demo content for their clients.

Evolve Technology has opened an Evolve CX (customer experience) space in Atlanta. Evolve CX is a technology laboratory aimed at education and training specifically for the virtual production market, where professionals can gain valuable hands-on experience and creative studios can develop and demo content for their clients.The Evolve CX team, led by Brian Macauto, director of technology for virtual production, opted to equip the space with Brompton LED video processors.

“Brompton is very respected in the virtual production industry for its friendly user interface and flexible features for things like color correction control and tuning the LED wall settings specifically to the camera,” said Macauto. “Compared to other processing options, Brompton is just the best of the best, and that’s what this industry wants to use.”

The Evolve CX virtual production volume is equipped with Studio 1.9 LED panels at 7,680 x 2,048 resolution, driven by two Brompton SX40 LED video processors and six Brompton XD data distribution units. It also has Unreal Engine, Pixera, and disguise media servers to feed content to the wall, Mo-sys and Stipe camera tracking, and a Sony Venice camera. Brompton’s LED video processors enable users to test several different workflow scenarios with ease.

“In order to effectively evaluate LED technology, you have to explore a lot of different types of settings that are available, such as frame rates and bit depths and brightness settings. Brompton has been helpful because it’s able to support all different types of incoming video signals, plus it comes with advanced feature sets that allow us to augment things like shutter angle, frame multipliers, or color control. This all helps us play with what the LED looks like on camera, which is key, because it can look very different from how it looks to your eye,” Macauto said.

Brompton’s features such as 3D LUT import and ShutterSync have been of particular interest to Macauto. 3D LUT augments Brompton’s standard color management features by letting advanced users create their own 3D LUT and import it directly into the Tessera LED processor, thereby integrating the LED wall into the color management workflow rather than matching manually. ShutterSync for the first time lets filmmakers tune the LED refresh to the camera, rather than the other way around, giving creative control back to the filmmaker.

“3D LUT is interesting to me because typically LUTs are handled on the content side and then once it gets to the LED wall we have to manually adjust the settings to make it look as close as possible to the initial creative intent. ShutterSync is also a great feature because it reduces visual artifacting and lets the creative team choose its desired camera configuration first, rather than having to tailor it to what the wall can handle. These are some of the capabilities that really set Brompton apart,” said Macauto.

Evolve CX https://evolvetechnology.live/virtual-production

Brompton Technology www.bromptontech.com