
ACES is an amazingly powerful color management system, but the creative ‘look’ in its RRT (Reference Rendering Transform) may not be the right fit for all projects. So how can we as colorists take advantage of ACES’ excellent workflow, including the IDTs (Input Device Transforms) and ultra-wide-gamut working color space, while avoiding the RRT? Enter the open-source OpenDRT (Display Rendering Transform) project, created by color scientist Jed Smith. I stumbled upon OpenDRT in a thread on ACES Central about LMTs and dealing with the Helmholtz-Kohlrausch effect (The thread is definitely worth a read – cool stuff, and deserving of a future Insight). The project has been around for a while, so I was a bit surprised that I hadn’t come across it before. As it turns out, OpenDRT is a very capable display transform that has a really nice feel while grading. It feels very neutral and logical, and I find that I can place colors where I want them without fighting some of the tones I sometimes get with the stock ACES RRT. And since it was new to me, I figure it might be new to a lot of you as well! Technically, OpenDRT can be used as a display transform for rendering almost any wide gamut scene-linear images to either SDR or HDR displays, not just ACES. But with its simple, robust and neutral nature, its a very useful replacement for the ACES RRT. In this Insight, I’ll go over how to implement the OpenDRT DCTL in a node-based ACES setup inside Resolve. Then I’ll compare OpenDRT to the ACES RRT on a wide range of ACES EXR frames to illustrate the types of footage where it might serve as a better starting point for grading. As indicated by the commit history on GitHub, OpenDRT is still a work in progress. Jed is still working to refine how the transform works, and is updating OpenDRT frequently. Therefore, I offer this warning: Don’t use OpenDRT on projects you’ll need to remain stable and consistent for any length of time. There’s no guarantee that a project graded using OpenDRT would look the same after installing a new version of the DCTL down the road. Here’s the OpenDRT GitHub link: https://github.com/jedypod/open-display-transform Installing DCTL files is as simple as installing a LUT. In fact, they go in the same folder! Once you’ve downloaded the archive, copy the DCTL files into your LUT folder and restart Resolve. The new DCTLs will be available in Resolve’s DCTL OFX plugin. Here’s a link to the installation instructions if you have any issues: https://github.com/jedypod/open-display-transform/blob/main/docs/doc_installation.md In this Insight I use a few of the great ACES EXR frames that Jed Smith has compiled for testing OpenDRT. Each of these clips is a single frame to make for smaller downloads, but otherwise are still 2K 16-bit ACES AP0 linear EXRs. Here’s the link to the description and download repository: https://github.com/jedypod/open-display-transform/blob/main/docs/support_footage.md
Using The OpenDRT DCTL As An Alternative To The ACES RRT
OpenDRT Project Design Goals
A Modern, All-Purpose Scene-Linear Display Transform
Work-In-Progress! An Open-Source Warning
Download
Installation
Test EXR frames
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